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Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, January 02, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, January 09, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, January 16, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, January 23, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, January 30, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, February 06, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, February 13, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, February 20, 1731,
Middlesex

Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal Tuesday, February 27, 1731,
Middlesex

Other Editions from Tuesday, September 22, 1733

Dublin Evening Post Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Dublin

Daily Courant Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

London Evening Post Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

London Country Journal Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

Daily Journal Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

Weekly Miscellany Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

London Read Weekly Journal Or British Gazetteer Tuesday, September 22, 1733 ,
Middlesex

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Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal

   Universal Spectator and Weekly Journal (Newspaper) - September 22, 1733, London, Middlesex                                The UNIVERSAL 0 WE E K L Y J O U R N A L. September 22, 1733. To Henry Mr. H E which you on all emboldens me to commence jour and I flatter you will not deny my as you may not only oblige a private but the Publick in This induces me to defire you would give a little Lecture on the Marriages of young who too frequently marry their Parents Serving Men I have an only Sitter who has foine fuch it is for her that I'm the more as your Advice may perhaps fave her from Ruin She reads your and approves them has good when from this unaccountable therefore I hope your on her will have fome Force with it will in a very particular Manner Your Tho' the Cafe of Sifter is a very unfortunate it is very common Several Daughters have lately been by this Folly and the Hearts of a great many indulgent Parents have been with Sorrow and too often beyond Power of by feeing all their Hopes married to a Gentlewomen who act thus do it from a Way of both as to Love and Marriage They imagine a Man fo inferior to whom they rauft love if not from a mutual from a Spirit of and too fatally conclude that the Marriage State will be far from proving where there is Love on one and at on the There is no accounting for the of nor giving a why they place their Affections on Objects the defending them Tiny call it that a blind Infatuation which hinders them from the glaring where they willingly would have none 5 but in my Opinion it a more grofs Name than when a young Lady of polite and virtuous flings away and Fortune on a Wretch without good or good Manners him for the Love of his what a does fhe run in making the future Part of her Life an invariable Series of The of a married Life depends not on the Love on one there muft be a mutual conjugal with a Simi itude of Sentiments t Manners and If this Harmony of Minds is the Yoke of Marriage will not the Lady's Lave will cool to to a and fettle into a That Gentlewoman who marries a Servant on a Supposition he will make an oat of wiil in- be Sentiments can from him who had any i far Experience Tyrants from their Ignorance they think they have a Share of Merit to all Mankind and that Woman who iias been abject to make their they are bafe to ufe as their a young her Fortune her own married her Father's Footman with her fhe at the of her and of her Enemies fne thought happy enough in her pretty Felicia tne Homy Moon was not half run out before ne began to exert the Authority of a aft routed her before Company would fuller no Men \o fee and would have Amours with all the Ladies that did Her Female Acquaintance her and when lhe had been long abused by her entirely by her fhe broke her Heart with Grief and There is one Thing which I think would terrify all virtuous young Gentlewomen from running into this Sort of matrimonial that it mult reflect on their No one will be 10 believe but it was they who made the who degraded to turn Solicitors in their and offer up voluntarily to the Embraces of their Ser for it is incredible to imagine there could be fuch Impudence in a Servant as to make any offers to his Lady without evident of his meeting with a favourable The following Letter has lain by us fome it was fent as a Specimen of a New St He in the and we were by our it was a genuine Copy from the Original Our was as to the it is not but an Imitation of much fuch Sort of Wit which a Letter I may fo call was wrote in by Mr. Thomas and printed among his Having been this kind of Drollery is coming into among your and that is Style for all humourous we communicate this Letter to the Publick to fhew on what mean and to what a trifling Ufe fome Gentlemen their whole Stock of Learning How noble are ihe Fruits of their after fifteen or twenty Years poring over the Ant lent can cull Scraps enough from them to tell how 1 hey an Evening in a For the Reputation of Literature in we t he and Parts of the yet the Connection will be full as and the Humour as To ARM A virumque you my by my Latin I'm heroically drunk Narratur catonis mero virtus The jolly Knight made me very merry on the Comes in via pro eji As foon as we at the grand we like true to make a Night Minima contentos node Brit anno s The Bowl but fine Venere friget Wine us with and Love with fa omnis Out we on the and to clear the Co aft Tros fuat nulla after a few we a gaping infernal Cavern the Company there was very polite Hie maims ob patriam pugnando qui que fii Fates 3 digna - Anglice Poets and s. The Knight immediately began with a j Tcr centum lonat ore das Bomb Murmur He all of curibus till a Fellow with a black Patch over one Eye informs ingens cu: lumen ademptum with a hollow Aec Vox mugire futes ramus attt mare and rook us the fat of the intendit qua a Midnight Spirit with a painted Quale portentum militaris He foon tot us teres us away to Durance wh .re we are now fin pine for atra Carmine &c I conclude this Paper with a Letter young Gentleman who has been fome for and which may perhaps be of to belides j S To O LT defire I'd explain my Thoughts mi x large than I did by a hrc more at I know nc Way to convey my Thoughts in that fee ret Manner you we held a dangerous by As to your of having fome Soliloquies from a Tragedy you have by impartially in this it cannot be we had feen the whole Tragedy No one be move ready to to any new of nor more willingly the of a but we mult do it with to and the k If you will you mult allow there is no forming any Judgment of a Tragedy front a few or not from wrote Scenes A few are in and be carefully may Author's Way of and irn of Thought give Scope fhew the timents Similes may convey a pretty Tu and cafy and a Love Seen to a great many Things but it is the the the artful the touching of and moving the various of the Soul that can alone form the Sirj are the why we cannot comply with your but there are others why you not it Should we inferr any of your it would lay you open to the of the nor could you be it would all in your Favour fome look on it as the Artifice of a others give it the Name of as I have the for Gentlemen in an Academic I take the Liberty to give you fome Advice which may not be to you You may entertain at College Notions of the till you come to may not feem By your Letter you feem to think there is only your Play the meeting of the coming up to and having it on the and young Gentlemen at the  

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