Remembrancer (Newspaper) - July 30, 1848, London, Middlesex T HE REMEMBRANCE R. By GEORGE July 30, 1748. 34. To George Hi E that a arid how great by by and reputed fell their their to and and undergo Attendance more grievous than Slavery in the Mines or for the Honour of becoming his muft needs imagine the to be which and that where fo many Furnaces and fo many ply the nothing lefs than the Grand or muft be the general and the general off his the the and that though the Sovereign rides in the the holds the and directs the of and according to his own that he makes the Laws bend under the Weight of his Judges that he renders Religion by the Influence Of fat and he the and Generals to his by convincing them that Preferment doth not depend on but on If he that this Idol is but with Homage and that hfs feeming as feeming are both multiplied and magnified j that his Vices Follies are not only or but often into and made the Subject of Panegyric a at was to make as on feeing the glittering Surface of and carry his no how ne help for a Prize in fo a Lottery i Or how could he even from his and actually did the Appetites of tho' not his he muft have very little Penetration on a fecond that all is but gaudy Within the Pride of Heraldry to a dead Body t a Gale of to perfume a Sepulchre j that even the very which every is but an Artifice to conceal infected that and are but Marks to the ugly of and that every Tongue is watched hy every Ear that every Avenue to Preferment is iced over that Innocence and are led the flippery and that whenever they they permitted to rife Hence Men truly wife have only but never could be upon to frequent Settlement there Grandeur but a Exchange for Peace j and truly through a of their own have the for fear of being by its Influence while who on the Strength of their and the of their had no fooner the Misfortune to be made but they forgot to be Good j their Integrity to give Place to their and the of their fo vehemently for is no than to be made to their It hence that there is a Regeneration in as well as Religion But then their Operations are totally the of each For the New Man becomes mortified to the World whereas the other becomes dead to every thing If he was not wicked he thinks it his Duty to becomes as the wife of flung all his Goods into the that be might more freely they get rid of their with the lefs they might manage Affairs of Too they change their as well as their Pride for they give Air of look and behave to all as if was their as if Civility belonged only to private of being they ought be that they provoke that they that they cannot they play the and endeavour to Men into All which Follies and they rufh in as it of their own better and the Examples fet before them in the Records of former There a Sort of Infatuation that attends on Ambition or who would venture up the very from whence he had feen fo many break their But their Eyes are of no more Ufe than a The Ignis fatum of which glitters from is the only Object of their Attention nor have they to a fingle Glance on the Ruins the Earth beneath It they the Tenure they to the Cafe in the charitable their when they in need of its Services nor can they how hard it is reconcile Profit or Power and it by they are brought fo and Actions and they would have heard the Proportion of with he that was once a Man 0/ muft forego that glorious muft to wear the Mark the in his and upon all to any however or what is to be expected from as are corrupt by j who had their Original in the Lives might as well be by their as their who a Jeft of who laugh at Virtue and who Jet to commit all Iniquity with f yet in Times of general Exhalations and appeared gilded though drawn from the and Ditches Though Princes are the World hath had melancholly Experience they are but is farther removed from them than cither fo they lie more to Fallacy and - with the beft a Sovereign may be led to put his in the of who the Royal Power and J and them to their own wicked who turn the Sceptre into a Rod of Iron who make a of who grow fat and bulky out of the Juice and of Provinces who build their Palaces out of the Ruins of Kingdoms who gratify their own private Spleen with the Hands and Arms of the ir Matter who brand for to pay Homage to them by ruinous and of by debauching the and playing the Mountebank with the throw it into a and then into a that it may have neither Strength nor Spirit maintain a Struggle for its own that they may both procure Indemnity to and entail the Spoils they have alike from Sovereign and on their in imitating of all having rifled the Ship they were to wilfully her to conceal the The took Care that none could obtain into the Temple of Honour r who did pafs through the Temple of Virtue is no that I know in the of the Moderns On the it lefs than among to acknowledge her Divinity and only are thought worthy of Power or who have floundered through the Gulph of It has been long the into this over Head and Ears at without to one Moment on the Borders of it and the t who fet for a not only the Butt of his but the Scorn and Jeft of his Friends But that Example has fince been fo frequently and fo that what was then a is now the and of being regarded with is regarded with T Tour humble &c. FOREIGN July 19. The of Poland have petitioned his to recommend their to his at in a more effectual Manner than in order to induce Diet to pay more Regard to their and grant them One of the Deputies of the Order of to the has received Sentence of Death for the Prince but his Royal having interceded for his Sentence has been changed to being confined to Bread and Water for a July 9. The King being with the Conduct of Mr. de Camp of his in the Negotiations with which he is charged at his has fent him to continue them at the He is fo fettle with the of the King of fome Articles relating to the Freedom of the Navigation in the as certain Points which the Company Mn at the Return of his from will