Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/47

 hitherto ecap'd unpunih'd, and (for ought I can ee) will till ecape.

However, it is pity, methings, in either cae, that the innocent hould be involve'd with the guilty; for innocent of both orts there certainly are. God grant that there may be many!

Having now finih'd all the introduction I deign to make to this undertaking, I will proceed in my next paper to expoe fraud and corruption to the world, and to et the famous luminaries of Great-Britain, our nureries of literature and religion, in a new, and in their proper light.

Quo emel et imbuta recens, ervabit Odorem Teta diu.——

, January 21.

HERE cannot be a plainer proof that any ociety wants a reformation, than to hew undeniably that it is faulty in its contitution, as well as its morals; that the laws made for its preervation and well-being are, many of them, wicked, unreaonable, ridiculous, or contradictory to ane another; that, for the mot part, thoe laws, which are o, are more inited upon, and more