. Don Juan junior: a poem, by Byron's ghost. Eachard, An Appendix to the Contempt of the Clergy, says :— There is a digression in this treatise, that the pretences made by thePriesthood, from time to time, that the Church is in danger ! is only atrick to make the laity passionate for that, of which, they themselves, havebeen negligent. NOTES. 55 49 « I Transacting business at the Foreign Office ; The circulars of the Morning Papers are crammed usque ad nauseam,with the names of those vain Sumphs, and ridiculous M. P. Dummies,who are continually boring the sub-underlings and lodging the


. Don Juan junior: a poem, by Byron's ghost. Eachard, An Appendix to the Contempt of the Clergy, says :— There is a digression in this treatise, that the pretences made by thePriesthood, from time to time, that the Church is in danger ! is only atrick to make the laity passionate for that, of which, they themselves, havebeen negligent. NOTES. 55 49 « I Transacting business at the Foreign Office ; The circulars of the Morning Papers are crammed usque ad nauseam,with the names of those vain Sumphs, and ridiculous M. P. Dummies,who are continually boring the sub-underlings and lodging their bits ofpasteboard at the several Government Offices ; that it may be reverberatedin print:— Sir Something Ignorance transacted business yesterday at theHome Office ; or vice versa.—The Foreign — Colonial — orBoard of Trade dittos.—What littleness there is in little men ! *° And now they are in the hand of all our fools ! Contentus paucis lectoribus. An tua demensVilibus in ludis dictari carmina malis ?Non ego : (Sat 10th.).


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Keywords: ., bookauthorwordsworthcollection, bookcentury1800, booksubjectbyro