LETTER X.
TO MR. EDWARD WESTON.
21. April, 1769.
SIR,
I SAID you were an old man without the benefit of experience. It seems you are also a volunteer with the stipend of twenty commissions; and, at a period when all prospects are at an end, you are still looking forward to rewards which you cannot enjoy. No man is better acquainted with the bounty of government than you are:
——ton impudence,
Temeraire vieillard, aura sa recompense.
But I will not descend to an altercation, either with the impotence of your age, or the peevishness of your diseases. Your pamphlet, ingenious as it is, has been so little read, that the public cannot know how far you have a right to give me the lye, without the following citation of your own words:
Page 6.—"1. That he is persuaded, that the motives, which he (Mr Weston) has