Page:The Travels of Dean Mahomet.djvu/363

114 ---what neceity is there to deal in this way with me, who am ready to devote my life and property to your ervice."--Many other letters followed this, and all were equally pathetic:

His manifeto, addreed to the native Princes, abounds with many ublime entiments, free from that founding phraeology too frequently ued in India; and expreive of the mot lively enibility for the, fate of a country, which he thus finely contrats with the other territories urrounding it.

In vindication of his government, he ays, "Look to my country; look to others---Do not the rent