Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/194

 N  xxlrII. bandrome, anti enough to vex any author aliv�i but, tbr God's ,fake, let the/addle be laid ulon the right borj$i don r let me fuffer for Cato's offenccsi fince from my fitting forth in the world, in this pub- lick manner, I have been very careful not to' in- crouch ulmn the pivileges or rerogatives of any my fdto-dbblers in ink i and can fifdy fly, that, in the courfe oralmolt thirty papers, I have not had, at molt, above nine andtent) throws upon the court, which is fuch a trifle, as. was never denyl to any uthor wlffoever, to gve a fpirit to his writings, and promote their jle. I will venture to appeal to your fell, whether, in your opinion, I have not flu& dole to my .fu. bjeEt, and kept up to the dgn ot my paper, wNch was, you know, to make the univer/Mes look as black as I tan; (with truth and juflice I mean.) And why you thould fo highly relent my doing this, (fince do not injure you, nor pretend to interfere with you in blackening anoerpt of,ne) feems to me verg furprizing and unaccountable. You know, molt learned driflarebu$, that there is not a penny to be got, in our way, by vicks or vinjications of any fort of men in for which teafort it is, that mo of Our weekly, Ibalf-weekl, and o,her our eriodieal productions, conill'[ chiefly of fatire, [arafm, aria rebtdees to our ' Flattery is a fulfome, oftenfive thin to j'_u,ort. the multitude, our iMu,'gent readers; and' e�pecl'lly fittery of dre't men, whom they are taught, from' their cadJe. always to �ufpec"t ofoguery and evil de- fignsi it is this c,.'rious, ping humour, and this. jcu perfuafion of the popu]aco, to whicll we are all ooag d for our far-,,ead fa;,e, and our full liea   ou and your haughty rival, t.h London-Seo#r- nat, furn' them ith ?otitkvl diet, .for which they rewa d you very welli the Indqendent Wb;g �ubo tilted un the courtfly of hia scadexs, in b�Iiev!ng-

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