Weekly Miscellany (Newspaper) - May 25, 1734, London, Middlesex By RICHARD of the Sa tor May 1734. 25; Author of the Weekly S I - HERE has lately appeared a entit Apology for Dr. the of which is to the of for the Promotion of a certain not long fince recommended to a vacant The Ground of the talked are certain Wordt faid to have beeft by that in private thirteen or fourteen Years of which the has received Information and very hard Things aje faid both of whb gave the and of Ws for paying fo mirch Regard to as to make it to the Of the Merits this Caufe I do not take upon to hut as a Stander-by I will take the Liberty of upon the Face of as appear at the or the Informer the upon them by this There are three Points which naturally offer to our Were the Words the in this or not? Was in the who heard to to Promotion Does it appear that the hath paid greater Regard to fuch Information than he aught to have paid Under Heads I reduce what I have to trouble you with on this The Point will be The does not deny that Words and only that they do yet * 9. pear he and that perhaps n. they are right f. To whom does it not yet appear that the Words were wrong to the And does he what the Words were } If he he not fet them that the World judge of them as well as he If tb what is it that he troubles iis with his The naturally that the Words luere till the contrary appears j and I am that whenever the undertakes to that they were not wiU do it in fuch a as will do the Gentleman no Upon the fecond we have more Here the Gentleman who gave Information to the is charged with betraying his concealing it fo and it to lie in his for fo many till fuch a critical the could not he the of but either from his Envy or or the or of If the of this are too had to him to he a they ought before now to have him from receiving 5. any other No But it does not yet appear that ever had an of to Promotion loor if had guilty of an is. it A as the that is founded If iie were interrelated upon the he might that from the Time that bis im tis fajr as would that he and acquainted his Friends with what had many them are faid to be rewly fo that he Years 2^0 made tbe by in order to prevent the future Promotion i that fince the Time when that Method it was not in his Power to there has been no other till the not only to be looked on as a and in all Ages and and at this Time maintained under all Forms of which no Society ever did or can but alio as the rial which has ever been as to the general Charge of betraying that of what one hears faid in every one that this is either right or may The teils that fome fuch as the King and every Man of ought to He it his to his * 10. and to his Country I defire ho fairer And I will beg Leave to demand an to this one plain the King make a certain Secretary or whom the by him to toBiS and of the would he not think bound upon his Allegiance to make of it O fays the there is great in As to the in but in putes of various no one is obliged to to another's what in No Man can he who does it. I that Men may differ in their Sentiments about the Titles of as well as any thing and therefore this is nothing to the out the Argument turns upon Matters of meer which is fo common a cant that can it. Matters of meer Speculation the Language of fuch Writers as are all Matters and the Meaning he would have it out is in Cafes where the of Civil Government is a Man may be obliged to whaf he hears in. private in Cafes where the of Religion alone is he Cannot be For which I him to give any other than that tho' a Man owes to his King and to his yet he owes none to his or to bis Let him fay this if he thinks fit or if iie will not fay let him fhew that the of Religion is not as m making the of is in making Generals pr of Under the are two Things to be The Matter d the and the of the As to the the tells that he is t 9. a a ought not be thought a But what has he faid one For I it a that 1 5w that heis tHat he is and the Vanity of getting 13. d Name - ' ' ' are to be in this it would be no hard Matter to determine Side Views will But I have ho to odious and therefore this Point with that what at the of without The has given full Proof of his own and of nothing But to the Matter of the what we fay An accidental which the former may probably have for got or -in the Warmth of the due Force of - only to and to hear the Opinion of his Friends * 11. are the From the whole of which the only thing I can certainly gather ii That the knows of the No doubt a be made between hafty Words deliberately and ex The from a Man's general And the or has he that the Or the has not fuch Knowledge of the general as will them in. believing that the Words were ex animo - The Publick has very lately of where it was before he what f which the had fome Exceptions to his ' general and that he this Cafe not as it flood but as with his general The may be wronged for ought I and I heartily it appear But till it does I cannot fee what Imputation fall upon hij for his of the and that the Matter may pafs under fuch nation as the Law allows in fuch The feems to lay great upon this that the Words were thirteen op fourteen Tears But I fee not what Advantage he can draw from it j for if later happen to tally was faid everi twenty Yeats - and there be no Proof that the Gentleman has fince altered his certainly a proper Matter of this will not make the but much as it will fhew him habitually tot that But the great Secret lies is That a Man's Faith is of fo little as not to be worth being brought The fays great Things of the -i This at is a Point out of 4II tion He that he has and But is to the fince he well that the is not about his hat his But what is a meer as I will fhew you from ' * All of art very clear k if a Man k f caa by If he What can tie Men of 0 hemie if that itf n|