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" But it signifies nothing : what I wrote was to discharge a debt I thought to my own and my son's memory, and to those who ought not to be considered as guilty of prodigality in giving me what is beyond my merits, but not beyond my debts, as you know.... "
Rhymed Plea for Tolerance: In Two Dialogues. With a Prefatory Dialogue .. - Page 142
by John Kenyon - 1833 - 149 pages
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The Edinburgh Review: Or Critical Journal, Volume 46

1827 - 698 pages
...not to be considered as guilty of prodigality in giving me what is 1 •• •yond my merits, but not beyond my debts, as you know. The public — I...They eat deep on what was designed to maintain me.' It is possible, that men in their sympathy for the fate of genius, as they will phrase it, may lament...
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The Works of Edmund Burke, Volume 9

Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1839 - 716 pages
...who ought not to be considered as guilty of prodigality in giving me what is beyond my merits, but not beyond my debts, as you know. The public — I...They eat deep on what was designed to maintain me. What is most material, your friend Mrs. Burke is, I bless God for it, much better. Her pains, which...
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History of the Life and Times of Edmund Burke, Volume 3

Thomas Macknight - 1860 - 802 pages
...memory, and to those who ought not to be considered prodigal in giving me what is beyond my merits, but not beyond my debts, as you know. The public — I...They eat deep on what was designed to maintain me."* To the most important point raised about the pension, that it was made on the authority of the Crown...
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The Ladies' Repository, Volume 20

1860 - 836 pages
...my son's memory, and those ought not to be considered as guiltv of prodigality in giving me what is beyond my debts, as you know. The public — I won't...about it — has overpaid me; I wish I could overpay creditors. They eat deep on what was desgined to maintain me." It is possible that men, in their sympathy...
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Edmund Burke's Letter to a Noble Lord

Edmund Burke - Great Britain - 1898 - 142 pages
...memory, and to those who ought not to be considered prodigal in giving me what is beyond my merits, but not beyond my debts, as you know. The public — I...They eat deep on what was designed to maintain me" ("Correspondence," p. 43). 9 4. One style to a gracious benefactor. Burke wrote " one language for...
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New Writings of William Hazlitt, Volume 1

William Hazlitt - Literary Collections - 2007 - 1143 pages
...that Troward has. He speaks of the pay he had received from Government, in the following terms: — overpaid me — I wish I could overpay my creditors....They eat deep on what was designed to maintain me. (Poor man! his apostacy was ill paid.) — p. 43. This is what he thought of the government in its...
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