XI. -- THAT WE MUST NOT LOOK A GIFT-HORSE IN THE M
Nor a ladys age in ter. e o do eit some faces spare us trouble of tal inquiries. And , , a sorry Rozinante, a lean, ill-favoured jade, ting up in ables? Must I, rat be obliged to my friend, make o Eclipse or Lig? A to palm icle upon us for good is expected in eited out of my t of my money. Some people ting upon you gifts of no real value, to engage you to substantial gratitude. e tis carries t, to t of absurdity -- if it o couple taken delicacy, and real good-nature. [p 262] Not an apartment in rue taste in ions), but is stuffed up erous print or mirror -- t adapted to at may s of kno of daubs, tcist of ance, ois. ture t to mortify ter at t refusal. It is pleasant (if it did not vex one at time) to see ting in s and cousins to God knotys of o ted frigo taircase and tript of e old auto give place to a collection of presentation copies -- try. A presentation copy, reader -- if innocent suc sell, sent you by tograp t; for o experience, olerable assortment of t- to ride a metapo deato ackno in some gifts te out of a friends library ( of t fit to be ed at among gentlemen -- to our palate, is of ttle conciliatory missives, s of game, fruit, per is essential to tter t it be o ry sitting t our table by proxy; to appreurkey, -- s to us ;plump corpusculum;quot; to taste o feel oast peculiar to tter; to concorporate erbury brao o knoely: sucicipation is metive, as t. For tions rictive regulations, o bear ry of try, irely done aands, makes many friends. Caius conciliates titiu