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Public Ledger Saturday, January 12, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Monday, January 14, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Tuesday, January 15, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Wednesday, January 16, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Thursday, January 17, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Friday, January 18, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Saturday, January 19, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Monday, January 21, 1760,
Middlesex

Public Ledger Tuesday, January 22, 1760,
Middlesex

Other Editions from Thursday, September 04, 1760

London Evening Post Thursday, September 04, 1760 ,
Middlesex

Public Advertiser Thursday, September 04, 1760 ,
Middlesex

London Chronicle Thursday, September 04, 1760 ,
Middlesex

Whitehall Evening Post Or London Intelligencer Thursday, September 04, 1760 ,
Middlesex

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Public Ledger

   Public Ledger (Newspaper) - September 4, 1760, London, Middlesex                                Vol. I. Da i l y egister Number 2,03. 4 T H U R S D & The V IS I TO R. NUMBER By P 81 a ij t h r o p v Am without to print the two following which I from the feme place in as the fame poll brought and with the fame mark on To Aug. dear commend Totty to your polite and ingenious Mr. James Congenial foals feel true J admire and And think Bm unhappy that I fo far as not to be able to give him the meeting with my fan in my in the Parky according to his I am fure meeting would have endeared us greatly but as it was not in my power to pluck fo delicate a flower of and as Mr. Bopp has not been kind enough to mention I take this opportunity of afluring him and that in conformity to prudent and I rooms that very night with a genteel I new fuits of linnen from I appeared laft night in a very genteel double pair were I wrought which all the ladies Beg to contemplate And this dear Jemmy gives the molt not only for the of the of one's But of one's in dol fay with a gift of fair hands which worked them on for me Hands to which Helen were rough and and white as the down of the Oh but it .is a terrible misfortune to be loved too a and you know Mr. Bopp what's do you things are right But my dear pray follow my as I follow you come hither for a little I felicitate on the of beholding your but more on the joy of introducing you to our We have a man for our de i though extra nous I think r better adapted to the He you know the he attends the card table more than the peace be with to the they will i wai their prerogative the m r cafe of in fhe could confide for as a upon She a Heated fev a g s machine purpled r morning was upon my button and defying danger with a felf approving I entered the gay It particularly and there were no me rather as. I not find I threw down at the feet of fweet dear and to chat with my for charming and to my ft which I urged the fervour of the eclat very as I did 1 draw the attention of all around me fome fome fome but all you are tpb elevated to or to be by little I in my Thinking it however at length to walk a minuet with an angelical being who flai s of how fhe dances 1--I found it fatigue to fan which fuch a of vulgar which that my partner the fidlers dropt their out their and pipe was in danger I own to you I was a little but I carried it off with a good and fet the I received other towards affronts from forpe were at the ball wear a they in every but I foon gave them to know their and reduced the to fome degree of The were very and if I knew which way - to but dear I J muft not of for it There is another too why I be glad to fee you a very private though be fure you keep it a profound That is to the of fome fancy who contemn my and laugh at the which to I up but the of a in which I as they call to I had the to ferve often behind our when I was engaged in odious But is that always to be Can a man never Is it not cruel to reap up old Are not fome men I gentlemen However their lot may I did not in my own I only fome men are and to be fure all great men who have been to thz public touch of pro bono ft have met with that is Envy does merit as its the proves L Therefore my dear if you and I meet with reviling and in our attempts to ferve the let not be but to we may not be fo much valued our we need not How great is the to the Bnc how little was Sir HJ Let this Mr. encourage us in the and the Let it to proceed to the necklace and and all' future generations will unite as well as the name of your great and Totty Aug. 1760. abide by I ' 1 have been very ill I caught a violent cold I was UDon taking like the you muft with and trip into I did not thoughts of the old clergyman came to a Canterbury weat in at one ear and out at I very I liked this world would be make j very and had - no vne at ten now tell Mr. that I have I never appear m public in the or at you may be fure to Totty the elegance of this long - and my 1 have 1 bloom pi perpetual his Mr. you fend this why the my excel us in of or behaviour Why we not decorate as and as gentle as theirs Let us at the valuable Your concerning is a happy I taken The ladies wear &c. ruffles Why we Jingle ones I have rejected and never appear without double I think U bell to witk as we I have inclination to fo long as I go to The poor old man lifted up his hands and eyes in and Alas 1 alas poor young there are no balls in Then I am fure they may go thither for can never be a place for where there is no this been talked as if I had * For my part I am no I hatp and Dr. Sulphur has thar prayer is a for does not God know what we and is not God if there is any God { pray give me your is heaven this old wizen-faced it yo really think that we neither hear nor fee table there 1. Gk I try your tongue u And each dty With the Fan St. and made it her to frequent all the public which were ufed by her diligence in could no intelligence pf 1 * eight months of with Poor time to kill On that day 0' 1 church * Or ne'er fee ball in heave 1 vf O V E has made fo that cannot be too * r and as more forcibly conveyed by by every account of the mis who have been wrecked up on fatal may contribute to put others upon their and make them fleer with caution a This has induced us to offer to the public the following which though it contains very is founded daughter of a merchant of this wealth was but liad beauty to the affection of a young gentleman of family and real name we beg leave to conceal under that of He foon t he gone - uit and return to The fame happening to pall an the of by the could perceive one man with much defended two: Her in love had made hen 2nd the a virtue not common in her She immediately attacked and of whereupon he betook and his feeing he had now two to quickly followed that the fee had was grown altogether weak by lofs of and that bis wounds were very him to be carried to a neighbouring and put to She then fent for a having examined his declared that were mortal and that he did not apprehend he had three days to The wounded as was in fome come to to fee his who waited on him but how was their mutual when covered m the fhe defended the by 1 in beheld his injured V interview threw by a flood of a 6mss her and feeing her once loved in ftich sr felt her and all her of hkr and for what was interviews were equally artel being apprized of his condition made his by a had lately been left him by his dying about days her for his She where lived a and the of her daughter's education was only and P LA N TATION found to procure to his quality from her to Bim from entertaining any of his He fo well in his that fhe became and indeed his and qualifications were fuch as might well her for When he few of her he a private marriage to telling that he could not hope forhis fathers as he was of a very advanced it might be his and when once he was his own mafter he would caufe it to be The inexperienced Camilla too and accordingly they were married at the The ceremony being Camilla was prevailed on by her lover to go over with him to There they lived for above a without any abatement appearing in the of on to upon being delivered of a Her did not laft who was no novice in grew of her before the fecond and went over telling chat of importance required his for a but he would it as as and return to hii Camilla upon the wings of at bore bis with with the his but when fhe found that it greatly exceeded the time he had mentioned ta fhe was terribly She did immediately call his fidelity in concern for his the fource of all her She wrote letters to and having received no concluded that fome accident muft him and therefore fet out for not being able to live in a cruel of Upon her arrival fhe made inquiry of treachery fhe foon received too full a He werit fo far as to deny that was his and to remove all her upon that fent her the to notwithstanding this injurious at endeavoured to recover by tender and But when Ihe received information that he had engaged in commanded to perfor w s. The this lady cannot reply fully at to haps he may But indeed you'll have no balls in would for the mens or rather for your own to xt is not by any means a female amour -j and was gone with her to her love was converted into rage and and fhe formed a to revenge her bafe or in the In order to put this fhe thought it to her and having left her daughter to the July 14. Laft one belonging to Fort arrived there in about ten from after a tedious He fays that the of ail from were packing up their in order to go to the and were all their with them that he had attempted to make his but was till at when in their they did not keep fuch a watch over them as he it. July 21. Saturday laft a gentleman arrived here from plade he left the Sunday Our of and in high and with all forts of in great On the 12th arrived at by Mr. of that was at in the year 1756, when that place unfortunately fell into the hands of the with thirteen by order of the French neral St. delivered to tive allies of the twelve 1 Pike and another were foon after into the woods bv the who employed them in hunting for fix months in the fall After two unhappy were conveyed to a town called inhabited by part of an Indian The next their was The they were the fame but were obliged to return in four beaver proving fo as not to afford the Indians during their their only was barks of trees and In the the fourth year their was to clear land and In i the fall Pike and his were fold for three years to two different French  

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