Tale XX.

Afterl. 29:

“Suppose I err, yet still your Son has shewnThat he believes his Father’s Lands his own—Not his in Strictness of the Law, but yetBy an implied and uncontracted Debt.

“Suppose I err, yet still your Son has shewnThat he believes his Father’s Lands his own—Not his in Strictness of the Law, but yetBy an implied and uncontracted Debt.

“Suppose I err, yet still your Son has shewnThat he believes his Father’s Lands his own—Not his in Strictness of the Law, but yetBy an implied and uncontracted Debt.

“Suppose I err, yet still your Son has shewn

That he believes his Father’s Lands his own—

Not his in Strictness of the Law, but yet

By an implied and uncontracted Debt.

afterl. 176:

“He who beheld thee in thy Closet—noneIn Sight, in hearing—thou, it seemed, alone.

“He who beheld thee in thy Closet—noneIn Sight, in hearing—thou, it seemed, alone.

“He who beheld thee in thy Closet—noneIn Sight, in hearing—thou, it seemed, alone.

“He who beheld thee in thy Closet—none

In Sight, in hearing—thou, it seemed, alone.

instead ofll. 183:

“Go to thy trial! me thou may’st believe,Yet doubt of that; but me thou may’st deceive.Him thou can’st not, and so may I with thee.

“Go to thy trial! me thou may’st believe,Yet doubt of that; but me thou may’st deceive.Him thou can’st not, and so may I with thee.

“Go to thy trial! me thou may’st believe,Yet doubt of that; but me thou may’st deceive.Him thou can’st not, and so may I with thee.

“Go to thy trial! me thou may’st believe,

Yet doubt of that; but me thou may’st deceive.

Him thou can’st not, and so may I with thee.


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