Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/391

 APPENDIX. bye cautd to ]e promulgated within your nions, aglinf[ the confumpfion of Tea and Cojei a talhionable vice, which tends only to/quandring awy mone, and mifi din t rnorning; (as you once ingenioufly expre/ d t) nothing more. can be expe&ed fiom thole JEIXTfiCt/L.R CONF. You go og, and are very prolix in cenfuring your Brethren, the Iqead o[ bourns, for their $le of. young ablemen and Gentlemen-commoners coremmid to their care, uf in the time manner which I hare * done only allo_wing for your uu- al fairo's and duifi.,. tt would be too tedious to quote all you paffies to this effe&; ffpecially confiderlng that my-letter is already fw�lled much beyond its intended length  i will therefore on- ly give the reader a timpie or two, and Co con- clude. I-Iar[ng toId us how a Governor ought to be- bye towards perfons of a fiOerior rank, ]tou pro- reed thus: " But a G.to, will no be fo bari, as, "in conjun&ion with grooms, and footmen, ncl "nurfes, and 4 refugee tutors, to [hew his refpe&  to them, by admiring their fertune, or theie birth, and thereby cmrupl their minds with faire "notions of greatneff i or by flattering them in their "j$1ie, or t-heir iee$; or by iting himfelt; to "their irregsdar apFetitra." Again you fpeak of- them thus: '  By this means they will be '.' in t vey place of their education, thol

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