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24<p><note>read thus far<lb/>Dates</note><lb/><hi rend="underline">Having the honour to be known to a gentleman who was intimate<lb/>with an old crony if the first cousin of a particular friend of the<lb/>mistress of the head footman in the family of the great man on whom such<lb/>graces depended,</hi> I had the good fortune to be able to make interest<lb/>once, and get admission, for a few minutes, into that celebrated<lb/>academy. I speak not out of vanity; still less out of a desire to censure,<lb/>when in truth there is no ground for it. The care is, as you cannot but<lb/>perceive, that, without some such arrangements as above to prevent the<lb/>pupils being at home to every body, no such Academy ever could have<lb/>been carried on. I had not, to be sure, as it happened, any friend there<lb/>at the time, to whom I wished to get an holiday: but how could the <lb/>master have known that, if I had not been fortunate enough to have formed<lb/>the chain of connections which recommended me to his confidence? You<lb/>saw, in my pamphlet, what I said on the subject at the time. A worthy<lb/>friend of mine, whom I need not mention to you, took me to task for<lb/>speaking so favourably. He had tasted the bread, and found it mouldy,<lb/>and I don't know what besides, which I have forgot. I told him<lb/>what was very true, that at the time that I published I knew nothing<lb/>of these complaints, and that what I said was the truth, the<lb/>whole truth, and nothing but the truth, as far as it then appeared<lb/>to me. I had no magic ring for making prison-doors fly open. The<lb/>master had had a week's notice. I had neither authority nor experience,<lb/>to examine and cross examine. The place was clean; the<lb/>people more so than <add>could</add> be expected. The master treated me with great<lb/>civility, and some very good bread, which he assured one was his<lb/>pupils' fare, and which I edified upon as such, seeing no reason to<lb/><sic>to</sic> suspect the contrary.</p>





Revision as of 14:50, 28 September 2017

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24

read thus far
Dates

Having the honour to be known to a gentleman who was intimate
with an old crony if the first cousin of a particular friend of the
mistress of the head footman in the family of the great man on whom such
graces depended,
I had the good fortune to be able to make interest
once, and get admission, for a few minutes, into that celebrated
academy. I speak not out of vanity; still less out of a desire to censure,
when in truth there is no ground for it. The care is, as you cannot but
perceive, that, without some such arrangements as above to prevent the
pupils being at home to every body, no such Academy ever could have
been carried on. I had not, to be sure, as it happened, any friend there
at the time, to whom I wished to get an holiday: but how could the
master have known that, if I had not been fortunate enough to have formed
the chain of connections which recommended me to his confidence? You
saw, in my pamphlet, what I said on the subject at the time. A worthy
friend of mine, whom I need not mention to you, took me to task for
speaking so favourably. He had tasted the bread, and found it mouldy,
and I don't know what besides, which I have forgot. I told him
what was very true, that at the time that I published I knew nothing
of these complaints, and that what I said was the truth, the
whole truth, and nothing but the truth, as far as it then appeared
to me. I had no magic ring for making prison-doors fly open. The
master had had a week's notice. I had neither authority nor experience,
to examine and cross examine. The place was clean; the
people more so than could be expected. The master treated me with great
civility, and some very good bread, which he assured one was his
pupils' fare, and which I edified upon as such, seeing no reason to
to suspect the contrary.




Identifier: | JB/550/220/002"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 550.

Date_1

Marginal Summary Numbering

Box

550

Main Headings

Folio number

220

Info in main headings field

Image

002

Titles

Category

Number of Pages

Recto/Verso

Page Numbering

Penner

Watermarks

Marginals

Paper Producer

Corrections

Paper Produced in Year

Notes public

ID Number

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