Page:Terræ-filius- or, the Secret History of the University of Oxford.djvu/135

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Terre- Fi. liur. 99 "verfity. After which the do&or tign'd my "t?icu!?tion paper, tettif),ing that I had nifo taken "the oath of' allegiance, though not one word o? "it, or his majelty Ki,g G?-oR?E, was then men- "tion'd. ,' "$houl,d you, upon the publifhing this letter, be "reproach d as an inventor ol: ?thoods, and the "thing ,be obje&ed againIt, as what was never "pra&is d in the univerfity, be but fo kind as to "acquaint the world with it, and 1'11 then openly "afterr what ! now only give you a private inti-. "marion of. "If this hint can any.ways be �ervlceable to you, "you are welcome to ?t, and may promill: }'our "tell' the future correfpondence of, $ir? PHILALETHE? From the lqrfi of there, I think, it appears, that according to the notions of three of the grea?eR men that our country ever Ned, ^rch-bifhop willot- .?r? bifhop �urnet, and Mr. Locke, the direSots o? ? the univerfities ([or ?rjeant Miller has prov'd the fame of Gam3ridge) cannot evade the charge o[' impoting PrmJ?R� upon all their members,/'rid of' initiating: thole of ?ur youth, who are to be the guardiar?s. and ornament o?'the commonwealth, in the impheir guilt of that ?oor]} of crimes. I need ?ot add, what every reader will naturally deduce in hil own mind, that? if this henious charge be a tru? F{{? tcharg:,