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+<title>The Mirror of Literature, &amp;c. NO. 321</title>
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Mirror, 1828.07.05, Issue No. 321, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Mirror, 1828.07.05, Issue No. 321
+ The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction
+
+Author: Various
+
+Posting Date: January 18, 2013 [EBook #8640]
+Release Date: August, 2005
+First Posted: July 29, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MIRROR, 1828.07.05 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and
+Instruction Jon Ingram, Charles Franks and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<h1>THE MIRROR OF LITERATURE, AMUSEMENT, AND INSTRUCTION.</h1>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>[NO. 321.] SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1828. [PRICE 2d.]</h2>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>EATON HALL, CHESHIRE,</h2>
+
+<p><i>The Seat of the Rt. Hon. Earl Grosvenor</i>.</p>
+
+<p><img width="100%" src="images/eaton_hall.png" alt=
+"EATON HALL, CHESHIRE"></p>
+
+<p>This mansion is a princely specimen of Gothic architecture;
+and is in every respect calculated for the residence of its noble
+possessor, whose taste and munificence in patronizing the Fine
+Arts are well known to our readers. Nevertheless, it is worthy of
+special remark, that not only is the name of GROSVENOR
+conspicuous in this patronage, but his lordship has further
+evinced his love of art in the construction of one of the most
+splendid buildings in the whole empire,&mdash;the present mansion
+having been completed within a few years.<sup><a name=
+"footnote_tag_1"></a><a href="#footnote_1">[1]</a></sup> Here the
+noble founder seems to have realized all that the ingenious Sir
+Henry Wotton considered requisite for a man's "house and
+home&mdash;the theatre of his hospitality, the seat of
+self-fruition, a kind of PRIVATE PRINCEDOM; nay, to the
+possessors thereof, an epitome of the whole world."</p>
+
+<blockquote><sup><a name="footnote_1"></a><a href=
+"#footnote_tag_1">[1]</a></sup> At this moment, Earl Grosvenor
+has in progress a splendid gallery for the reception of his
+superb collection of pictures, adjoining his town mansion, in
+Grosvenor-street. This is one of the few "Private Collections" to
+which, through the good taste and courtesy of the proprietor, the
+public are admitted, on specified days, and under certain
+restrictions. The nucleus of Earl Grosvenor's collection, was the
+purchase of Mr. Agar's pictures for &pound;30,000; since which it
+has been enlarged, till it has at length become one of the finest
+in England. In the drawing-room at Eaton are, <i>Our Saviour on
+the Mount of Olives</i>, by Claude Lorraine, which is the largest
+painting known to have been executed by him; and <i>A Port in the
+Mediterranean</i>, by Vernet. In the dining-room, <i>Rubens with
+his Second Wife</i>; by himself; and <i>The Judgment of
+Paris</i>, a copy, by Peters, after Rubens. In the dressing-room
+of the state bed-room, <i>David and Abigail</i>, also by Rubens.
+Over the ornamented chimney-pieces of the hall are, West's
+<i>Dissolution of the Long Parliament</i>, and <i>The Landing of
+Charles the Second</i>.</blockquote>
+
+<p><i>Eaton</i> is situated about three miles to the south of
+Chester, on the verge of an extensive park, thickly studded with
+fine old timber. The present "Hall" occupies the site of the old
+mansion, which is described as a square and spacious brick
+building erected by Sir Thomas Grosvenor, in the reign of William
+III. The architect was Sir John Vanbrugh, who likewise laid out
+the gardens with straight walks and leaden statues, in the formal
+style of his age. In the reconstruction, the fine vaulted
+basement story of the old Hall was preserved, as were also the
+external foundations, and some subdivisions; but the
+superstructure was altered and entirely refitted, and additional
+apartments erected on the north and south sides, so as to make
+the area of the new house twice the dimensions of the old
+one.</p>
+
+<p>The style of architecture adopted in the new Hall is that of
+the age of Edward III, as exhibited in that Parthenon of Gothic
+architecture, York Minster; although the architect, Mr. Porden,
+has occasionally availed himself of the low Tudor arch, and the
+forms of any other age that suited his purpose, so as to adapt
+the rich variety of our ancient ecclesiastical architecture to
+modern domestic convenience. Round the turrets, and in various
+parts of the parapets are shields, charged in relievo with the
+armorial bearings of the Grosvenor family, and of other ancient
+families that, by intermarriages, the Grosvenors are entitled to
+quarter with their own. The windows, which are "richly dight"
+with tracery, are of cast-iron, moulded on both sides, and
+grooved to receive the glass. The walls, battlements, and
+pinnacles, are of stone, of a light and beautiful colour, from
+the Manly quarry about ten miles distant.</p>
+
+<p>The annexed engraving represents the west-front of the house,
+in the centre of which is the entrance, by a vaulted porch, which
+admits a carriage to the steps that lead to the Hall, a spacious
+and lofty room, occupying the height of two stories, with a
+groined ceiling, embellished with the Grosvenor arms, and other
+devices, in the bosses that cover the junction of the ribs. The
+pavement is of variegated marble in compartments. At the end of
+the Hall, a screen of five arches support a gallery which
+connects the bed-chambers on the north side of the house with
+those on the south, which are separated by the elevation of the
+Hall. Under this gallery, two open arches to the right and left
+conduct to the grand staircase, the state bed-room, and the
+second staircase; and opposite to the door of the hall is the
+entrance to the saloon. The grand staircase is elaborately
+ornamented with niches and canopies, and with tracery under the
+landings; and in the principal ceiling, which is surmounted with
+a double skylight of various coloured glass. The state bed-room
+is lighted by two painted windows, with tracery and armorial
+bearings. In the saloon are three lofty and splendidly painted
+windows, which contain, in six divisions,&mdash;the portraits of
+the conqueror's nephew, Gilbert le Grosvenor, the founder of the
+Grosvenor family, and his lady; of William the Conqueror, with
+whom Gilbert came into England; the Bishop of Bayeux, uncle to
+the conqueror; the heiress of the house of Eaton; and Sir Robert
+le Grosvenor, who signalized himself in the wars of Edward
+III.</p>
+
+<p>The saloon is a square of thirty feet, formed into an octagon
+by arches across the angles, which give to the vaultings a
+beautiful form. Opposite to the chimney piece is an organ richly
+decorated. On the left of the saloon is an ante-room leading to
+the dining-room; and on the right, another leading to the
+drawing-room: the windows of these rooms are glazed with a light
+Mosaic tracery, and exhibit the portraits of the six Earls of
+Chester, who, after Hugh Lupus, governed Cheshire as a County
+Palatine, till Henry III bestowed the title on his son Edward;
+since which time the eldest sons of the kings of England have
+always been Earls of Chester.</p>
+
+<p>The dining-room, situated at the northern extremity of the
+east front, is about 50 feet long and 30 feet wide, exclusive of
+a bay-window of five arches, the opening of which is 30 feet. In
+the centre window is the portrait of Hugh Lupus; which, with the
+portraits of the six Earls of Chester, in the ante-room windows,
+were executed from cartoons, at Longport, Staffordshire. The
+ceiling is of bold and rich tracery, with a profuse emblazoning
+of heraldic honours, and a large ornamented pendant for a
+chandelier.</p>
+
+<p>The drawing room, which is at the southern extremity of the
+east front, is of the same form and dimensions as the
+dining-room, with the addition of a large window to the south,
+commanding the luxuriant groves of meadows of Eaton, and the
+village and spire of Oldford above them. All the windows of this
+room are adorned with heads and figures of the ancestors of the
+family; also the portraits of the present Earl and Countess, in a
+beautiful brown <i>chiaro-scuro</i>. The ceiling is tracery of
+the nicest materials and workmanship emblazoned with the arms of
+the Grosvenor family, and those of Egerton, Earl of Wilton, the
+father of the present Countess Grosvenor.</p>
+
+<p>Eaton became the property of the Grosvenor family through the
+marriage of Ralph Grosvenor, in the reign of Henry VI with Joan,
+daughter of John Eaton, then owner of this estate. The Grosvenor
+family, as we have already intimated, came into England with
+William the Conqueror; they derived their name from the office of
+chief huntsmen, which they held in the Norman court; and, when
+"chivalry was the fashion of the times," says Pennant, "few
+families shone in so distinguished a manner: none shewed equal
+spirit in vindicating their rights to their looms." He then
+mentions the celebrated legal contest with Sir Richard le
+Scroope, for the family arms&mdash;<i>Azure, a bend or</i>. This
+cause was tried before the High Constable and the Earl Marshal of
+England, in the reign of Richard II. It lasted three years;
+kings, princes of the blood, and most of the nobility, and among
+the gentry, Chaucer, the poet, gave evidence on the trial. "The
+sentence," says Pennant, "was conciliating; that both parties
+should bear the same arms; but the <i>Grosvenours avec une
+bordure d'argent</i>. Sir Robert resents it, and appeals to the
+king. The judgment is confirmed; but the choice is left to the
+defendant, either to use the <i>bordure</i>, or bear the arms of
+their relations, the ancient Earls of Chester, <i>azure, a gerb
+d'or</i>. He rejected the mortifying distinction, and chose a
+<i>gerb</i>: which is the family coat to this day."</p>
+
+<p>Hitherto we have only spoken of the artificial splendour of
+Eaton. The natural beauties with which it is environed will,
+however, present equal, if not superior, attraction for the
+tourist. The stiff, formal walks of Vanbrugh no longer disfigure
+the grounds, which are now made to harmonize with the contiguous
+landscape, and are enlivened by an inlet of the Dee, which
+intervenes between the eastern front of the mansion, and the
+opposite plantations. These alterations have, however, been made
+with great judgment, and a few of the venerable beauties of the
+park remain. Thus, a fine aged avenue extends westward to a
+Gothic lodge in the hamlet of Belgrave, about two miles distant
+from the Hall. Another lodge, in a similar style of design, is
+approached by a road, which diverges from this avenue towards
+Chester, and crosses the park, through luxuriating plantations,
+which open occasionally in glade views of the Broxton and Welsh
+Hills. The most pleasing approach to this noble mansion is one
+which has been cut through the plantations, towards the
+north-east angle of the house, so as to throw the whole building
+into perspective.</p>
+
+<p>Viewed from either of the beautiful sites with which the park
+abounds, Eaton is a magnificent display of towers, and turrets,
+pinnacles and battlements, partly embosomed in foliage, and
+belted with one of the richest domains in England. Indeed, its
+splendour seldom fails to strike the overweening admirer of art
+with devotional fondness, which is not lessened by his approach
+to the fabric.<sup><a name="footnote_tag_2"></a><a href=
+"#footnote_2">[1]</a></sup> The most favourable distant views are
+from the Aldford road, and from the romantic banks of the Dee,
+whence there is a proud display of architectural grandeur. In
+every point, however, the grounds and mansion of Eaton will
+abundantly gratify the expectations of the visiter. Altogether,
+they present a rich scene of nature, diversified and embellished
+by the attributes of art; and the admiration of the latter will
+be not a little enhanced by the reflection that the building of
+this sumptuous pile provided employment for a large portion of
+the poor of Chester during one of the most calamitous periods of
+the late war.</p>
+
+<blockquote><sup><a name="footnote_2"></a><a href=
+"#footnote_tag_2">[1]</a></sup> One view from the interior
+deserves special mention: viz. from the saloon, upon a terrace
+350 feet in length, commanding one of the richest landscapes on
+the banks of Dee. The boasted terrace at Versailles is but 400
+feet in length; yet, how many Englishmen, who have seen the
+latter, are even ignorant of that at Eaton.</blockquote>
+
+<p>The noble founder of Eaton has indeed learned to "build
+stately," and "garden finely;" and has thus made the personal
+fruition of his wealth subservient to its real use&mdash;the
+distribution.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>ORIGIN OF CHESS.</h3>
+
+<p>(<i>To the Editor of the Mirror</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>SIR,&mdash;In vol. 3, page 211, of the MIRROR, is an account
+of the origin of the scientific game of chess, the invention of
+which, your correspondent <i>F. H. Y.</i> has attributed to a
+brahmin, named Sissa. But I believe it is entirely a matter of
+doubt, both as to where, and by whom it was invented; it is
+evidently of very high antiquity, and if we recur to the original
+names of the pieces with which it is played, we shall readily be
+convinced it is of Asiatic original. The honour of inventing it,
+is contended for by several nations, but principally by the
+Hindoos, the Chinese, and the Persians. In support of the first,
+we are told, by Sir William Jones, in the 2nd vol. of his
+<i>Asiatic Researches</i>, that the game of chess has been
+immemorably known in Hindostan, by the name of Chaturanga, or the
+four members of an army, viz. elephants, horses, chariots, and
+foot soldiers. And yet, the same learned author observes, that no
+account of the game has hitherto been discovered in the classical
+writings of the brahmins. Mr. Daines Barrington supposed the
+Chinese to be the inventers, and in this he is supported by a
+paper published in the Transactions of the Royal Irish Academy,
+for 1794, vol. 5, by Mr. Eyles Irwin. It states, that when Mr.
+Irwin was at Canton, a young mandarin, on seeing the English
+chess-board, recognised its similarity with that used for a game
+of their own; and brought his board and equipage for Mr. Irwin's
+inspection, and soon after gave him a manuscript extract from a
+book, relating the invention of the Chinese game, called by them
+chong-he, or the royal game, which it attributed to a Chinese
+general (about 1,965 years ago) who by its means reconciled his
+soldiers to passing the winter in quarters in the country of
+Shensi, the cold and inconvenience of which were likely to have
+occasioned a mutiny among them. Other writers contend that chess
+is a game of Persian invention, since <i>scah muth</i> is the
+Persic term for check-mate; and since the Persians were sedulous
+in recommending it to their young princes, as a game calculated
+to instruct kings in the art of war. It has been attributed to
+Palamedes, who lived during the Trojan war; but it was a game
+played with pebbles, or cubes, of which he was the inventer.
+Palamedes was so renowned for his sagacity, that almost every
+early discovery was ascribed to him. Whether the Greeks or Romans
+were acquainted with this game is doubtful. Of the three
+contending nations, the claim of the Persians appears to me to be
+least eligible, and that of the Chinese the most.</p>
+
+<p><i>Near Sheffield.</i></p>
+
+<p>J. M. C-D.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>THREE SONNETS TO JOHN KEATS.</h3>
+
+<p>(<i>For the Mirror</i>.)</p>
+
+<pre>
+ I can think of thee! now that the light spring
+ Showers live in the rich breezes, and the dyes
+ Of the glad flowers are won from her blue eyes
+ Exulting; whilst loud songs, on the fleet wing
+ Of the Earth's seraphs, bear her welcoming
+ From it to heaven, and, up to the far skies,
+ From turf-born censers floods of incense rise.
+ I can think of thee in my wandering;
+ And when the heart leaps up within to bless
+ The sights of love and beauty, on each hand,&mdash;
+ The pouring-out of sky-sprung happiness
+ Over the dancing sea and the green land,
+ Thought wakes one saddening thrill of bitterness&mdash;
+ Thou canst not o'er this Eden smiling stand!
+</pre>
+
+<pre>
+ Yes! even as the quick glow of Spring's first smile
+ Is unto the renewed spirit,&mdash;even
+ As that abundant gush of wine from Heaven
+ Loosens the dreary grasp of Cares which coil
+ Round the lone heart like serpents,&mdash;the sweet toil
+ Of draining the dear dream-cup thou hast given
+ Is unto me,&mdash;and thoughts which long have striven
+ With joyousness, flit far away the while
+ My lips are prest to it. By the fire-light,
+ Or in full gaze of sun-set, when the choirs
+ Of winged minstrels, waking out of light,
+ Ring requiem meet to those departing fires&mdash;
+ Let me be with thee then&mdash;forgetting quite
+ The world, its scornfulness, and its desires.
+</pre>
+
+<pre>
+ O! I could weep for thee! and yet not tears
+ Of hopelessness, but triumph, and sit down
+ And weave for thee wet wild-flowers for a crown&mdash;
+ Then up, and sound rich music in thine ears;
+ And teach thee, that sweet lips, in coming years,
+ Shall lisp the songs which cold dull hearts disown,&mdash;
+ That all which hope could pant for is thine own,&mdash;
+ Dimmed, for a moment's space, with human fears.
+ Then watch the new-born glories in thine eye,
+ Glancing like lightning from its chariot cloud,
+ And list these words, which know not how to die,&mdash;
+ Joy's inspiration gushing forth aloud:
+ Then back again unto the world and sigh,
+ And wrap my heart up in a dusky shroud.
+</pre>
+
+<p>THOMAS M&mdash;&mdash; S.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>CHOOSING OF BAILIFFS AT BRIDGNORTH.</h3>
+
+<p>(<i>For the Mirror</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>The bailiffs of Bridgnorth are chosen out of the twenty-four
+aldermen upon St. Matthew's Day in the following
+manner:&mdash;The court having met, the names of twelve aldermen
+being separately written on small pieces of paper, are closely
+rolled up by the town clerk, and thrown into a purse, which is
+shaken by the two chamberlains standing upon the chequer, (a
+large table in the middle of the court,) and held open to the
+bailiffs, when each, according to seniority, takes out a roll. By
+this means the callers are decided, who, mounting the chequer,
+alternately call the jury of fourteen out of the burgesses
+present. They are then sworn neither to eat nor drink till they,
+or twelve of them, have chosen two fit persons, who have not been
+bailiffs for three years before, to serve that office for the
+ensuing year; they are locked up till they have agreed, which
+sometimes occasions long fastings. In 1739, the jury fasted
+seventy hours. The persons chosen are sworn into office on
+Michaelmas Day.&mdash;W. H.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>ON COALS, AND THE PERIOD WHEN THE COAL MINES IN ENGLAND WILL
+BE EXHAUSTED.</h3>
+
+<p>(<i>From Bakewell's Introduction to Geology, 3rd Edition,
+1828</i>.)</p>
+
+<p>Coal was known, and partially used, at a very early period of
+our history. I was informed by the late Marquis of Hastings, that
+stone hammers and stone tools were found in some of the old
+workings in his mines at Ashby Wolds; and his lordship informed
+me also, that similar stone tools had been discovered in the old
+workings in the coal-mines in the north of Ireland. Hence we may
+infer, that these coal-mines were worked at a very remote period,
+when the use of metallic tools was not general. The burning of
+coal was prohibited in London in the year 1308, by the royal
+proclamation of Edward I. In the reign of Queen Elizabeth, the
+burning of coal was again prohibited in London during the sitting
+of parliament, lest the health of the knights of the shire should
+suffer injury during their abode in the metropolis. In the year
+1643, the use of coal had become so general, and the price being
+then very high, many of the poor are said to have perished for
+want of fuel. At the present day, when the consumption of coal,
+in our iron-furnaces and manufactories and for domestic use, is
+immense, we cannot but regard the exhaustion of our coal-beds as
+involving the destruction of a great portion of our private
+comfort and national prosperity. Nor is the period very remote
+when the coal districts, which at present supply the metropolis
+with fuel, will cease to yield any more. The annual quantity of
+coal shipped in the rivers Tyne and Wear, according to Mr.
+Bailey, exceeded three million tons. A cubic yard of coals weighs
+nearly one ton; and the number of tons contained in a bed of coal
+one square mile in extent, and one yard in thickness, is about
+four millions. The number and extent of all the principal
+coal-beds in Northumberland and Durham is known; and from these
+data it has been calculated that the coal in these counties will
+last 360 years. Mr. Bailey, in his Survey of Durham, states, that
+one-third of the coal being already got, the coal districts will
+be exhausted in 200 years. It is probable that many beds of
+inferior coal, which are now neglected, may in future be worked;
+but the consumption of coal being greatly increased since Mr.
+Bailey published his Survey of Durham, we may admit his
+calculation to be an approximation to the truth, and that the
+coal of Northumberland and Durham will be exhausted in a period
+not greatly exceeding 200 years. Dr. Thomson, in the Annals of
+Philosophy, has calculated that the coal of these districts, at
+the present rate of consumption, will last 1,000 years! but his
+calculations are founded on data manifestly erroneous, and at
+variance with his own statements; for he assumes the annual
+consumption of coal to be only two million eight hundred thousand
+tons, and the waste to be one-third more,&mdash;making three
+million seven hundred thousand tons, equal to as many square
+yards; whereas he has just before informed us, that two million
+chaldrons of coal, of two tons and a quarter each chaldron, are
+exported, making four million five hundred thousand tons, beside
+inland consumption, and waste in the working<sup><a name=
+"footnote_tag_3"></a><a href="#footnote_3">[1]</a></sup>.
+According to Mr. Winch, three million five hundred thousand tons
+of coal are consumed annually from these districts; to which if
+we add the waste of small coal at the pit's mouth, and the waste
+in the mines, it will make the total yearly destruction of coal
+nearly double the quantity assigned by Dr. Thomson. Dr. Thomson
+has also greatly overrated the quantity of the coal in these
+districts, as he has calculated the extent of the principal beds
+from that of the lowest, which is erroneous; for many of the
+principal beds crop out, before they reach the western
+termination of the coal-fields. With due allowance for these
+errors, and for the quantity of coal already worked out, (which,
+according to Mr. Bailey, is about one-third,) the 1,000 years of
+Dr. Thomson will not greatly exceed the period assigned by Mr.
+Bailey for the complete exhaustion of coal in these counties, and
+may be stated at three hundred and fifty years.</p>
+
+<blockquote><sup><a name="footnote_3"></a><a href=
+"#footnote_tag_3">[1]</a></sup> The waste of coal at the pit's
+mouth may be stated at one-sixth of the quantity sold, and that
+left in the mines at one-third. Mr. Holmes, in his Treatise on
+Coal Mines, states the waste of small coal at the pit's mouth to
+be one-fourth of the whole.</blockquote>
+
+<p>It cannot be deemed uninteresting to inquire what are the
+repositories of coal that can supply the metropolis and the
+southern counties, when no more can be obtained from the Tyne and
+the Wear. The only coal-fields of any extent on the eastern side
+of England, between London and Durham, are those of Derbyshire
+and those in the west riding of Yorkshire. The Derbyshire
+coal-field is not of sufficient magnitude to supply, for any long
+period, more than is required for home consumption, and that of
+the adjacent counties. There are many valuable beds of coal in
+the western part of the west riding of Yorkshire which are yet
+unwrought; but the time is not very distant when they must be put
+in requisition, to supply the vast demand of that populous
+manufacturing county, which at present consumes nearly all the
+produce of its own coal mines. In the midland counties,
+Staffordshire possesses the nearest coal districts to the
+metropolis, of any great extent; but such is the immense daily
+consumption of coal in the iron-furnaces and founderies, that it
+is generally believed this will be the first of our own
+coal-fields that will be exhausted. The thirty-feet bed of coal
+in the Dudley coal-field is of limited extent; and in the present
+mode of working it, more than two-thirds of the coal is wasted
+and left in the mine.</p>
+
+<p>If we look to Whitehaven or Lancashire, or to any of the minor
+coal-fields in the west of England, we can derive little hope of
+their being able to supply London and the southern counties with
+coal, after the import of coal fails from Northumberland and
+Durham. We may thus anticipate a period not very remote, when all
+the English mines of coal and ironstone will be exhausted; and
+were we disposed to indulge in gloomy forebodings, like the
+ingenious authoress of the "Last Man," we might draw a melancholy
+picture of our starving and declining population, and describe
+some manufacturing patriarch, like the late venerable Richard
+Reynolds, travelling to see the last expiring English furnace,
+before he emigrated to distant regions.<sup><a name=
+"footnote_tag_4"></a><a href="#footnote_4">[1]</a></sup></p>
+
+<blockquote><sup><a name="footnote_4"></a><a href=
+"#footnote_tag_4">[1]</a></sup> The late Richard Reynolds, Esq.,
+of Bristol, so distinguished for his unbounded benevolence, was
+the original proprietor of the great iron-works in Colebrook
+Dale, Shropshire. Owing, I believe, partly to the exhaustion of
+the best workable beds of coal and ironstone, and partly to the
+superior advantages possessed by the iron-founders in South
+Wales, the works at Colebrook Dale were finally relinquished, a
+short time before the death of Mr. Reynolds. With a natural
+attachment to the scenes where he had passed his early years, and
+to the pursuits by which he had honourably acquired his great
+wealth, he travelled from Bristol into Shropshire, to be present
+when the last of his furnaces was extinguished, in a valley where
+they had been continually burning for more than half a
+century.</blockquote>
+
+<p>Fortunately, however, we have in South Wales, adjoining the
+Bristol Channel, an almost exhaustless supply of coal and
+ironstone, which are yet nearly unwrought. It has been stated,
+that this coal-field extends over about twelve hundred square
+miles, and that there are twenty-three beds of workable coal, the
+total average thickness of which is ninety-five feet, and the
+quantity contained in each acre is 100,000 tons, or 65,000,000
+tons per square mile. If from this we deduct one half for waste
+and for the minor extent of the upper beds, we shall have a clear
+supply of coal, equal to 32,000,000 tons per square mile. Now if
+we admit that the five million tons of coal from the
+Northumberland and Durham mines is equal to nearly one-third of
+the total consumption of coals in England, each square mile of
+the Welsh coal-field would yield coal for two years' consumption;
+and as there are from one thousand to twelve hundred square miles
+in this coal-field, it would supply England with fuel for two
+thousand years, after all our English coal-mines are worked
+out.</p>
+
+<p>It is true, that a considerable part of the coal in South
+Wales is of an inferior quality, and is not at present burned for
+domestic use; but in proportion as coal becomes scarce, improved
+methods of burning it will assuredly be discovered, to prevent
+any sulphureous fumes from entering apartments, and also to
+economize the consumption of fuel in all our manufacturing
+processes.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>SONG.</h3>
+
+<p>(<i>For the Mirror.</i>)</p>
+
+<pre>
+ Thou hast not seen the tear-drops fill
+ The eyes which worship thee;
+ The deepest curse, the darkest ill,
+ Hovers above&mdash;around me&mdash;still
+ There are no tears for me!
+
+ Thou canst not know, why I should kneel
+ For tears to heaven&mdash;in vain;
+ The thousand changeless pangs we feel,&mdash;
+ The precious drops, perchance, might heal,&mdash;
+ They will not start again!
+
+ Thou canst not know what hopes will spring
+ When I can gaze on thee,
+ Even in the cold heart withering;
+ Oh! thou to whom that heart must cling,
+ Art more than tears to me!
+</pre>
+
+<p>THOMAS M&mdash;&mdash; S.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>HINTS FOR HEALTH.</h3>
+
+<blockquote>["A very old and active correspondent," <i>Tim
+Tobykin</i>, has furnished us with the following interesting
+extracts from Dr. Rennie's <i>Treatise on Gout and Nervous
+Diseases</i>, just published. These, however, are but a portion
+of our correspondent's selections; and as they are written in a
+popular style and appear to be equally applicable to the welfare
+of all classes, they will doubtless be acceptable to our readers.
+We are not friendly to the introduction of purely professional
+matters into the pages of the MIRROR, but the following extracts
+are so far divested of technicality as to render their utility
+and importance obvious to every reader.]</blockquote>
+
+<p>CLIMATE, LOCALITY, AND SEASONS.</p>
+
+<p>I shall first inquire, says Dr. Rennie, what are the effects
+of climate on healthy constitutions, as respects heat, cold,
+moisture, and vicissitudes; including also the diurnal and annual
+revolutions.</p>
+
+<p>Cold applied to the body acts as a direct sedative. It
+diminishes the nervous sensibility, represses the activity of the
+circulation, detracts from the sum of the animal heat, and
+thereby diminishes stimulation. In the cessation of excitement
+and sensibility that ensues, the whole vital actions are
+moderated, existing irritation is soothed; and in the same manner
+as sleep recruits the wasted powers, so does cold restore and
+invigorate the nerves when overstimulated, and in fact promotes
+the tone and vigour of the whole body; when again a warmer
+atmosphere succeeds a colder, the animal heat increases in its
+sum, the surface of the body is re-excited, nervous sensibility
+returns, and a reaction of the circulation takes place; so that
+the blood diffuses itself in greater abundance towards the remote
+and superficial parts of the body, and the secretions are also
+promoted.</p>
+
+<p>Alternations of cold and heat therefore in healthy
+constitutions within certain limits, are salutary; promoting, on
+the one hand, the vigour and tone of the body; on the other, the
+due activity and excitement of the various functions.</p>
+
+<p>The temperature occasioned by day and night, and also those
+more progressive and slow alternations of heat and cold, on the
+large scale, attending the annual revolution of the seasons, are
+a natural provision admirably adapted to effect these objects as
+described; constituted as our bodies are, such a constant and
+regular succession of heat and cold is just such as the
+necessities of the human frame require. The alternations of day
+and night, of winter and summer, are far from being merely
+incidental and unimportant circumstances in the general
+adaptation of the earth to man's constitutional wants; neither do
+they bear reference solely to the productions of the earth for
+his use. They exert a continual and direct influence on his
+constitution, calculated to aid the vigorous and healthy
+performance of the various functions of the body each in its due
+degree and order, and they conduce mainly to the perfection and
+longevity of the species.</p>
+
+<p>Let us therefore trace the effects of these changes on the
+human body.</p>
+
+<p>During the winter, the prevailing cold acts as a universal
+sedative and tonic, soothing the nervous excitement and
+sensibility, allaying the activity of the circulation, moderating
+the functions of the skin, and diminishing the various
+secretions.</p>
+
+<p>As the Spring opens, the sun gains daily in influence,
+generating a gradually increasing atmospheric warmth. The body
+therefore becomes subject from this heat to a reactive effect,
+during which the nervous sensibility and circulation are
+gradually re-excited, the blood is more equally diffused towards
+the surface and extremities of the body, and the secretion by the
+skin is increased.</p>
+
+<p>If the cold of winter were to continue unmitigated from year
+to year, without the genial influence of summer, the human race,
+as is apparent in polar regions and upland mountainous districts,
+would degenerate into dwarfishness.</p>
+
+<p>If the heat of summer were continually maintained the whole
+year round, a tendency to degeneracy of the race would be also
+observed, as we see in tropical latitudes. It is in the medium
+betwixt these extremes, where a moderate and regular winter cold
+is succeeded by a mild, genial summer temperature, that the
+species approaches most to perfection in stature, health,
+strength, and longevity.</p>
+
+<p>In observing also the influence of day and night on the
+constitution, there is a sedative effect produced in the morning
+before the sun is up, a reactive tendency promoted towards noon
+under the solar influence, and again towards evening this
+reaction is repressed by the sedative effect of the evening cold;
+and this sedative effect is at its maximum at midnight. Hence
+those who sit up late feel unusually chilly and depressed towards
+midnight, partly owing to exhaustion from want of sleep, but
+chiefly from the total absence of solar influence in the
+atmospherical temperature. In regular habits this sedative effect
+is never thoroughly experienced; for before midnight, the
+constitution, enveloped in warm blankets, has experienced the
+reaction arising from the accumulation of heat in bed. Whence the
+common remark, that one hour's sleep before midnight is worth
+three after that hour, is actually true to a certain extent. By
+early retirement to rest, the sedative effect on the
+constitution, to an extent such as to disturb the functions, is
+escaped.</p>
+
+<p>If we connect these two influences, the annual and diurnal
+successions of cold and heat, in their joint effect, we find,
+that about, or a little after the summer solstice, the influence
+of the sun being at its maximum, the nervous sensibility, heat,
+circulating excitement, and cutaneous secretions of the body, are
+also at their maximum. The temperature of the day and night
+differ so little, that the sedative effects of evening and
+morning are not sufficient to restore the frame by soothing the
+sensibilities, overexcited and irritable from the previous
+warmth. Whence the languor and irritability felt in summer, when
+the heat is long continued, and the nights are spent in
+restlessness and anxious oppression. Exhaustion and relaxation of
+the frame are the consequence.</p>
+
+<p>As the autumnal equinox verges on, the mornings and evenings
+get cooler in relation to the mid-day heat; and about the
+equinox, the difference in the temperature of mid-day and
+midnight is at its maximum. We have therefore a powerful sedative
+effect in the morning, which braces and invigorates the body; a
+powerful reactive effect at mid-day, which rouses and stimulates
+the actions and sensibilities of the frame; and again towards
+evening a sedative effect, from the increasing cold reaching its
+maximum at midnight.</p>
+
+<p>As the season passes on from the Equinox towards the winter
+solstice, the heat of the sun daily diminishes, and the cold
+gains a daily preponderance. The sedative effect on the body goes
+on progressively increasing, being less and less counteracted by
+any genial influence from the solar heat at mid-day; whence the
+gloom and depression so universally experienced by the nervous in
+November and December, which is more and more felt till the
+shortest day. So soon as the minimum of solar influence and
+maximum of sedative effect on the body has passed over, the sun
+gradually acquires more of meridian influence, and a daily
+increasing ascendancy over the prevalent cold. The human
+constitution at the same time is subject to a proportionate
+reactive disposition; which reaction is felt most at noon, and it
+daily becomes more and more apparent till the vernal equinox,
+when we have the difference betwixt the meridian and midnight
+temperature again at a maximum. We have daily a powerful sedative
+effect in the morning, a powerful meridian reaction, which again
+subsides into a sedative condition on the access of the evening.
+This daily effect on the constitution is exactly similar to that
+at the autumnal equinox, only it occurs under different
+circumstances. In autumn it is connected with departing heat and
+progressively increasing cold; in Spring it is connected with
+progressively diminishing cold and advancing heat. After the
+vernal equinox, the difference in the meridian and midnight
+temperature gradually diminishes; the daily sedative effect at
+morning and evening becomes less and less apparent as general
+atmospheric warmth prevails, till towards the summer solstice,
+the general effect on the constitution is stimulation and
+excitement by atmospheric heat.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>NOTES OF A READER.</h2>
+
+<p>BYRON'S "FARE THEE WELL."</p>
+
+<p>On one occasion of a mediator waiting upon Lord Byron upon the
+subject of a reconciliation with his wife, he produced from his
+desk a paper on which was written "fare thee well," and said,
+"Now these are exactly my feelings on the subject&mdash;they were
+not intended to be published, but you may take
+them."&mdash;<i>Lit. G.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>EARLY HOURS.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Franklin published an ingenious Essay on the advantages of
+early rising.&mdash;He called it "an economical project," and
+calculated the saving that might be made in the city of Paris, by
+using the sunshine instead of the candles&mdash;at no less than
+4,000,000l. sterling.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>SENSITIVE PLANTS.</p>
+
+<p>Light exercises a very remarkable influence upon the
+irritability of the sensitive plant. Thus, if a sensitive plant
+be placed in complete darkness, by carrying it within an opaque
+vessel, it will entirely lose its irritability, and that in a
+variable time, according to a certain state of depression or
+elevation of the surrounding temperature.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>At Brussels, the demand for labour is so great, in consequence
+of the number of new buildings, that tradesmen consider they
+confer a favour on a customer by the execution of his orders. The
+lower classes have become, within the last seven years, extremely
+dissipated, owing it is supposed to the increase in the wages of
+the mechanics and labourers employed in the numerous buildings
+erected within that period. During the Kaermess annual feast of
+three days, it is calculated 80,000 <i>litres</i> (pots) are
+drunk each day!</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Cooper, the American novelist, has just published two volumes
+of "Notions" of his countrymen, in the course of which he bestows
+on them the following surperlative epithets: "most active,
+quick-witted, enterprising, orderly, moral, simple, vigorous,
+healthful, manly, generous, just, wise, innocent, civilized,
+liberal, polite, enlightened, ingenious, moderate, glorious,
+firm, free, virtuous, intelligent, sagacious, kind, honest,
+independent, brave, gallant, intellectual, well-governed,
+elevated, dignified, pure, immaculate, extraordinary, wonderful,"
+&amp;c. He then calls them the "most improving," which is
+painting, nay coating, the lily, to "wasteful and ridiculous
+excess."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>OSTRICHES</p>
+
+<p>Impart a lively interest to a ride in the Pampas. They are
+sometimes seen in coveys of twenty or thirty, gliding elegantly
+along the undulations of the plain, at half pistol-shot from each
+other, like skirmishers. The young are easily domesticated, and
+soon become attached to those who caress them; but they are
+troublesome inmates; for, stalking about the house, they will,
+when full grown, swallow coin, shirt-pins, and every small
+article of metal within reach. Their usual food, in a wild state,
+is seeds, herbage, and insects; the flesh is a reddish brown, and
+if young, not of bad flavour. A great many eggs are laid in the
+same nest. Some accounts exonerate the ostrich from being the
+most stupid bird in the creation. This has been proved by the
+experiment of taking an egg away, or by putting one in addition.
+In either case she destroys the whole by smashing them with her
+feet. Although she does not attend to secrecy, in selecting a
+situation for her nest, she will forsake it if the eggs have been
+handled. It is also said that she rolls a few eggs thirty yards
+distant from the nest, and cracks the shells, which, by the time
+her young come forth, being filled with maggots, and covered with
+insects, form the first repast of her infant brood. The male bird
+is said to take upon himself the rearing of the young. If two
+cock-birds meet, each with a family, they fight for the supremacy
+over both; for which reason an ostrich has sometimes under his
+tutelage broods of different ages.&mdash;<i>Mem. Gen.
+Miller.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Kitchiner recommends a gentleman who has a mind to carry
+the arrangement of his clothes to a nicety, to have the shelves
+of his wardrobe numbered 30, 40, 50, and 60, and according to the
+degree of cold pointed to by his thermometer, to wear a
+corresponding defence against it.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Harwood fed two pointers; one he suffered to sleep after
+dinner, another he forced to take exercise. In the stomach of the
+one who had been quiet and asleep, all the food was digested; in
+the stomach of the other, that process was hardly begun.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>SIR WALTER'S LAST.</p>
+
+<p>At page 354 of our last vol., the reader will find an eloquent
+description of Perth, from the Wicks of Beglie, quoted from St.
+Valentine's Eve. This turns out to be a topographical blunder,
+for the "fair city" cannot be seen at all from the said Wicks,
+whereas the author has described it as the best point of view. As
+our readers have long since enjoyed the description, we shall
+doubtless be pardoned for thus noticing the mistake.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>TELEGRAPHS.</p>
+
+<p>The system of telegraphs has arrived at such perfection in the
+presidency of Bombay, that a communication may be made through a
+line of 500 miles in eight minutes.&mdash;<i>Weekly Rev.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>One of the drawing-room critics who uphold the literature of
+lords and ladies, sums up the merits of fashionable novel-writing
+as follows:&mdash;"After all, it is something to scrutinize lords
+and ladies, recline on satin sofas, eat off silver
+dishes&mdash;whose nomenclature is the glory of
+<i>l'artiste</i>&mdash;though only in a book."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>MAHOGANY.</p>
+
+<p>The largest and finest log of mahogany ever imported into this
+country has been recently sold by auction at the docks in
+Liverpool. It was purchased for 378l., and afterwards sold for
+525l., and if it open well, it is supposed to be worth 1,000l. If
+sawed into veneers, it is computed that the cost of labour in the
+process will be 750l. The weight on the king's beam is six tons
+thirteen hundred weight.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dugald Stewart, the celebrated metaphysician, of whom Scotland
+has just reason to be proud, died a short time since at
+Edinburgh, at the age of seventy-five. He recently published two
+volumes, of which a distinguished gentleman in Edinburgh thus
+speaks:&mdash;"June 16. Dugald Stewart is to be buried to-morrow.
+A great light is gone out, or rather gone down,&mdash;for its
+glory will long be in the sky, though its orb be no more visible
+above the horizon. He corrected his last two volumes with his own
+hand within these three months. What philosopher, especially
+palsy-stricken ten years ago,&mdash;could ring in better.
+Glorious fellow! I hear his splendid sentences and exquisite
+voice sounding in mine ear at the distance of nearly thirty
+winters. His peculiar merit was the purity and loftiness of his
+moral taste. For about forty years he raised the standard of
+thought and feeling among successive generations of young men, to
+a range it would never otherwise have attained."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>OLD AND NEW VAUXHALL.</p>
+
+<p>Of old, a half-crown at the door, and the price of such
+comestibles as were devoured, were grumbled at as tax enough; but
+now the account stands in a fairer form, because you are charged
+distinctly for every item, so that you know what you are paying
+for, and may choose or reject, as you think fit. Thus Mr. Bull,
+from Aldgate, with Mrs. Bull, and only four of the younger Bulls
+and Cows, numbering six in all, make good their entry at the cost
+of 1l. 4s.&mdash;Books to tell them what they are to see and
+hear, the when and the how are 3s. Seats for the vaudeville
+(average of modest places) 9s. Ditto for the ballet 6s. Ditto for
+the battle 6s. Ditto for the fire-works 6s.&mdash;Total 2l.
+14s.&mdash;But then they are not charged for seeing the lamps;
+there is no charge for walking round the walks; there is no
+charge for looking at the cosmoramic pictures; there is no charge
+for casting a glance at the orchestra; there is no charge for
+staring at the other people; there is no charge for bowing or
+talking to an acquaintance, if you meet one&mdash;all these are
+gratis; and if you neither eat nor drink, there is no charge for
+witnessing those who do mangle the long-murdered honours of the
+coop, and gulp down the most renovating of liquors, be they hale
+or stout, vite vine, red port, or rack punch.&mdash;<i>Lit.
+Gaz</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Bruges, (celebrated as the birthplace of John Van Eyck, said
+to have invented the art of oil-painting), is now in a very
+dilapidated condition. It was formerly a place of great commerce,
+and the merchants of Bruges were the wealthiest in Europe. The
+population is reduced from 100,000 to 25,000.&mdash;<i>Brussels
+Companion</i>.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>DISTURBING THE DEAD.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crawfurd, in his recent Mission to <i>Hu&eacute;</i>,
+wished to visit the mausoleum of the late king; "but," says he,
+"we were politely informed that the king was always reluctant to
+permit the visits of strangers, whose presence," he said, "might
+'trouble the repose of the spirits of his ancestors.'"</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dine with a march-of-intellect man, and only observe the
+downcast eyes of his pale-faced, trembling wife&mdash;the knit
+brows of his sullen sons&mdash;the sulky sorrows of his
+joy-denied daughters. All that comes of your hard-hearted,
+hard-headed, music-painting-and-poetry-despising, utilitarian,
+intellectual, all-in-all educationists, who know nothing so
+admirable as a steam-engine, and would wish to see the whole
+world worked by machinery.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"FASHIONABLE" NOVELS.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a specimen of the <i>slip-slop</i> with which so many
+thousand reams of paper have lately been spoiled. "Tea was
+announced, and the ladies adjourned to the saloon; Lady Harriet
+and Lady Charlotte, discussing, as they went in together, the
+difficult question, whether it was or was not an improvement in
+modern arrangements to have tea <i>en-buffet</i>. One of its
+advantages the ladies were perfectly aware of, namely, that it
+afforded a <i>point de r&eacute;unir</i>, for both beaux and
+belles, which is always so much wanted before the music begins;
+and calculating on this important circumstance, Lady Charlotte
+possessed herself of the chair which was the most accessible of
+the whole group. Miss Mortimer, with equal foresight, stationed
+herself at the fire:&mdash;"Good generalship," whispered Lady
+Hauteville to the duchess, as the two experienced matrons
+communicated together <i>sur les petites ruses</i>, which the
+actors fancied were unperceived, &amp;c."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Walsh, in his <i>Journey from Constantinople</i>,
+describes a species of woodpecker, about the size of a thrush, of
+a light, blue colour, with black marks beside the bill. "It
+entered my room," says he, "with all the familiarity of an old
+friend, hopped on the table, and picked up the crumbs and flies.
+It had belonged to the doctor's child, just buried, and by a
+singular instinct, left the house of the dead, and flew into my
+room. Its habits were curious, and so familiar, that they were
+quite attractive; it climbed up the wall by any stick or cord
+near it, devouring flies. It sometimes began at my foot, and at
+one race, ran up my leg, arm, round my neck, down my other arm,
+and so to the table. It there tapped with its bill with a noise
+as loud as a hammer. This was its general habit on the wood in
+every part of the room; when it did so, it would look intently at
+the place, and dart at any fly or insect it saw running. Writers
+on Natural History say it makes this noise to disturb the insects
+concealed within, so to seize them when they appear."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>At Brussels apartments are not to be procured for a shorter
+term than six months.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>In the prison at Ghent, spirits are sold, but pens and paper
+cannot be obtained without a special application to the
+governor.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Brande, in his recent Lecture on Vegetable Chemistry,
+says, "Salt has been very much extolled for a manure; I believe
+that a great deal more has been said of it than it deserves; it
+certainly destroys insects, but I do not believe what has been
+said of its value. We are not to infer that because a manure is
+found to be useful on one soil in a certain climate, that it
+shall prove equally useful in others; experience must direct us
+in this particular."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>STROLLING SCHOOLS.</p>
+
+<p>In Prussia there exist, what are termed <i>Strolling
+Schools</i>, having no fixed place. The teacher, with his
+scholars or his classical furniture, establishes himself in all
+the houses or a village successively, where he affords
+instruction; and his stay is determined by the number of persons
+he is called upon to instruct under each roof, a week being the
+allotted term, for each child, during which period the parents
+supply all the wants of the <i>Domine.&mdash;Athenaeum.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>RETROSPECTIVE GLEANINGS</h2>
+
+<p>The following extracts from a "roll of the expenses of Edward
+I., at Rhuddlan Castle, in Wales, in the tenth and eleventh years
+of his reign" (1281 and 1282), may perhaps amuse our readers, as
+showing the rates of wages paid to different workmen, tradesmen,
+archers, &amp;c. at that period. Under the head of
+<i>necessaries</i>, are some curious items. Rhuddlan Castle was
+the head quarters of Edward, during an insurrection of the Welsh,
+under Llewellin, Prince of Wales, at which time it had many
+additions made to it:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Paid to Master Peter de Brompton for the wages of 100
+carpenters, each receiving 4d. per day, and their constable
+receiving 8d. per day; of which five are overseers of twenty, and
+each receives 6d. per day for his wages, from Sunday 23rd of
+August for the seven following days, 12l. 3s. 9d.</p>
+
+<p>To two smiths, one receiving 4d. per day, and the other 3d.
+for their wages, from Sunday 23rd of August to Sunday l2th of
+September, <i>each day being reckoned</i>, for twenty one days,
+12s. 3d.</p>
+
+<p>Two shoeing smiths by the day, at 3d.</p>
+
+<p>Paid to forty-seven sailors of the king for their wages, seven
+days; each receiving per diem 3d., except seven, each of whom
+received 6d. per day, 4l. 14s. 6d.</p>
+
+<p>Paid to Geoffry le Chamberlin for the wages of twelve
+cross-bowmen and thirteen archers for twenty-four days; each
+cross-bowman receiving by the day 4d, and each archer
+2d.,&mdash;7l. 8s.</p>
+
+<p>Paid to one master mason, receiving 6d. per diem, and five
+masons at 4d., and one workman at 3d.; for twenty-eight days, 3l.
+7s. 8d.</p>
+
+<p>Sunday next, after the feast of St. John Baptist, paid to
+twenty-two mowers, each receiving 1-1/2d. per day for four days,
+11s.</p>
+
+<p>Wednesday following paid to twenty-three mowers, each
+receiving 6d. per day for their wages of two days, 1l. 3s.</p>
+
+<p>Paid to fourscore and sixteen <i>spreaders of hay</i> for one
+day's wages, whereof fourscore received each per day 1-1/2d, and
+each of the others 2d., l2s. 8d.</p>
+
+<p>Paid to 160 spreaders of hay for their wages, Sunday and
+Monday, 16s. 6d.</p>
+
+<p><i>Necessaries.</i></p>
+
+<p>For six carts, each with three horses, hired to carry the hay
+from the meadows to the castle of Rothelan, for one day, 6s.
+10d.</p>
+
+<p>For the carriage of turf, with which the house was covered in
+which the hay was placed, 1s. 5d.</p>
+
+<p>For an iron fork bought to turn the hay, 3d.</p>
+
+<p>For making a ditch about the house where the said hay was put,
+1s. 8d.</p>
+
+<p>For putting and piling up one rick of hay in the house, 1s.
+8d.</p>
+
+<p>Wages of two turf-cutters, seven days, at 5d. per day, 5s.
+10d.</p>
+
+<p>For the carriage of turves to cover the king's kitchen, 7s.
+6d.</p>
+
+<p>For twenty-two empty casks, bought to make paling for the
+queen's court yard, 18s. 4d.</p>
+
+<p>To Wildbor, the fisherman, receiving 10d. per day, and his six
+companions, the queen's fishermen, at 3d. per day each, fishing
+in the sea, forty-two days, 4l. 18s.</p>
+
+<p>Repairing a cart of the king's, conveying a <i>pipe of
+honey</i> from Aberconway to Rothelan, 1s. 4d.</p>
+
+<p>To six men carrying shingles to cover the hall of the castle,
+at 2-1/2d each per day, seven days, 8s. 9d.</p>
+
+<p><i>Gifts.</i></p>
+
+<p>To a certain female spy, as a gift, 1s.</p>
+
+<p>To a certain female spy, to purchase her a house, as a gift,
+1l.</p>
+
+<p>To Ralph le Vavasour, bringing news to the queen of the taking
+of Dolinthalien, as a gift, 5l.</p>
+
+<p>To John de Moese, coming immediately after with the same news,
+with letters of the Earl of Gloucester, by way of gift, 5l.</p>
+
+<p>To a certain player, as a gift, 1s.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Swan with Two Necks.</i></p>
+
+<p>It appears from the roll of swan's marks, in the time of Henry
+VIII., that the king's swans were <i>doubly</i> marked, and had
+what were called <i>two nicks</i>, or notches. The term, in
+process of time, not being understood, a double animal was
+invented, with the name of "The Swan with <i>Two Necks</i>." But
+this is not the only ludicrous mistake that has arisen on the
+subject, since "swan-upping," or the taking up of swans,
+performed annually by the swan companies, with the Lord Mayor at
+their head, for the purpose of marking them, has been changed, by
+an unlucky asperite, into swan-<i>hopping</i>, which is perfectly
+unintelligible.</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Trial of the Pix.</i></p>
+
+<p>The invention of it, in this kingdom, or at least its
+introduction into our courts, is probably of high antiquity,
+being mentioned in the time of Edward I., as a mode well known
+and of common usage. At present it is seldom required, except on
+the removal of the master of the Mint from his office. Upon a
+memorial praying for a trial of the Pix by this officer, a
+summons issues to certain members of the privy council to meet on
+a day fixed. The Lord Chancellor also directs a precept to the
+wardens of the Goldsmith's company, requiring them to nominate a
+competent number of able freemen of their company, skilful to
+judge of, and to present the defaults of the coin, if such be
+found, to be of a jury. When the court is formed, twelve of these
+persons are sworn, who are directed by the president to examine
+whether the moneys were made according to the indenture, and
+standard trial pieces, and within the remedies. But in 1754, Lord
+Chancellor Talbot directed the jury to express precisely how much
+the money was within the remedies; and the practice which he thus
+enjoined is still continued. The Pix, or box containing the coins
+to be examined, is then delivered to the jury, who retire to the
+court room of the Duchy of Lancaster, whither the Pix is removed,
+together with the weights of the Exchequer and Mint, and where
+the scales used on this occasion are suspended; the beam of which
+is so delicate, that it will turn with <i>six grains</i>, when
+loaded with the whole of those weights, to the amount of 48 lbs.
+8 oz. in each scale. The Pix is then opened, and the money which
+had been taken out of each delivery, and enclosed in a parcel
+under the seals of the warden, master, and comptroller of the
+Mint, is given to the foreman, who reads aloud the endorsement,
+and compares it with the account which lies before him; he then
+delivers the parcel to one of the jury, who opens it and examines
+whether its contents agree with the endorsement. When all the
+parcels have been opened, and found right, the moneys contained
+in them are mixed together in wooden bowls, and afterwards
+weighed. Out of the said moneys so mingled, the jury take a
+certain number of each species of coin, to the amount of one
+pound for the assay by fire. And the indented trial pieces of
+gold and silver, of the dates specified in the indenture, being
+produced by the proper officer, a sufficient quantity is cut from
+either of them, for the purpose of comparing with it the pound
+weight of gold or silver which is to be tried by the usual
+methods of assay. The jury then return their verdict, stating how
+much the coins examined have varied from the weight and fineness
+required, and whether the variations exceed or fall short of the
+remedies which are allowed; and according to the terms of the
+verdict, the master's quietus is either granted or withheld.</p>
+
+<p><i>Note</i>.&mdash;The <i>remedies</i> are an allowance of one
+sixth of a carat, or forty grains, in the pound weight of gold,
+and of two pennyweights in that of silver, considered either as
+to fineness or weight, or both of them taken together; the
+moneyers are, however, at this time so expert, that these
+quantities are much greater than are necessary.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>SPIRIT OF DISCOVERY</h2>
+
+<p><i>Society of Civil Engineers</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A charter of incorporation has just received the royal
+signature, constituting an institution of Civil Engineers, and
+naming Mr. Telford its president. The objects of such
+institution, as recited in the charter, are, "The general
+advancement of mechanical science, and more particularly for
+promoting the acquisition of that species of knowledge which
+constitutes the profession of a civil engineer; being the art of
+directing the great sources of power in nature for the use and
+convenience of man, as the means of production and of traffic in
+states, both for external and internal trade, as applied in the
+construction of roads, bridges, aqueducts, canals, river
+navigation, and docks, for internal intercourse and exchange; and
+in the construction of ports, harbours, moles, breakwaters, and
+light-houses, and in the art of navigation by artificial power,
+for the purposes of commerce; and in the construction and
+adaptation of machinery, and in the drainage of cities and
+towns."</p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Toads as Ant-eaters</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In the autumn of last year, a pit, wherein I grew melons, was
+so much infested with ants, as to threaten the destruction of the
+whole crop; which they did, first by perforating the skin, and
+afterwards eating their way into the fruit; and, after making
+several unsuccessful experiments to destroy them, it occurred to
+me that I had seen the toad feed on them. I accordingly put about
+half a dozen toads into the pit, and, in the course of a few
+days, scarcely an ant was to be found.&mdash;<i>Corresp. Gard.
+Mag.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Laying out Part of the Calton Hill as
+Pleasure-Ground</i>.</p>
+
+<p>We observe with pleasure plans advertised for in the Edinburgh
+newspapers, for this purpose. There is no city in Britain which
+presents greater facilities for public walks and gardens than
+Edinburgh, notwithstanding the immense injury which it has
+sustained in a picturesque point of view by the earthen mound,
+and the mean buildings which cover great part of the bottom and
+sides of the valley of the North Loch. That valley ought to have
+been laid out in terraces, some open, or covered with glazed
+verandas, for winter use, and others shaded by trees for summer
+walking. The great art in laying out walks for recreation and
+ease on sloping surfaces, is so to direct them as not to render
+them more fatiguing than straight walks on level ground. But the
+grand subject of improvement at Edinburgh, in the way of planting
+in the public walks, is the hill of Arthur's Seat, which, planted
+and built on, might be rendered one of the most unique scenes in
+Europe.&mdash;<i>Gard. Mag.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Vegetables.</i></p>
+
+<p>Watering gives vegetables long exposed a fresher colour, and a
+more attractive appearance; but repeated waterings are highly
+pernicious, as they neutralize the natural juices of some, render
+others bitter, and make all others vapid or
+disagreeable.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Mortar.</i></p>
+
+<p>The use of lime in mortar, is to fill up the hollow spaces or
+vacuities between the grains of sand, and to cement them
+together, thereby forming a kind of artificial stone. To add any
+more lime than is sufficient to fill up these spaces, seems to be
+useless, and to add much more must weaken the mortar; but, if too
+little lime be used, there will be cavities left between some of
+the grains of sand, and the mortar will consequently be short or
+brittle: therefore, when we cannot ascertain the best proportions
+of lime and sand, it is better to use too much lime than too
+little.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Treatment of Gold and Silver Fish.</i></p>
+
+<p>These beautiful objects of the animal kingdom, though long ago
+introduced into Europe from China, their native country, seldom
+breed in such numbers as they might be expected to do. It has
+been lately discovered that in ponds heated by waste water
+discharged from steam factories, the gold and silver fish breed
+abundantly. From this circumstance, it has been suggested, that,
+as heating hothouses by warm water is now so generally adopted, a
+portion of this, led occasionally into a garden basin, would keep
+the water in such a temperament as would not only always be
+agreeable to the fish, but promote their
+breeding.&mdash;<i>Ibid.</i></p>
+
+<p>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p><i>Climate.</i></p>
+
+<p>Professor Schow, of Copenhagen, has lately read a paper "On
+the supposed Changes in the Climate of the different parts of the
+Earth, during the period of Human History," from which, as far as
+it has appeared in our language, it seems to be his opinion,
+that, on a general view, climates are the same now as in ancient
+times. The identity of the climate of Palestine, now and during
+antiquity, is thus beautifully made out:&mdash;"It will be
+convenient to begin with Palestine, the Bible being the oldest,
+or one of the oldest of books; and, although great uncertainty
+exists about the determination of the plants which are mentioned
+in it, yet two of them do not admit of any doubt, (and these are
+sufficient for the determination of the climate of Palestine, in
+former times,) viz. the date-tree and the vine. The date-tree was
+frequent, and principally in the southernmost part of the
+country. Jericho was called Palm-town. The people had palm
+branches in their hands. Deborah's palm-tree is mentioned between
+Rama and Bethel. Pliny mentions the palm-tree as being frequent
+in Judea, and principally about Jericho. Tacitus and Josephus
+speak likewise of woods of palm-trees, as well as Strabo,
+Diodorus Siculus, and Theophrastus. Among the Hebrew coins, those
+with date-trees are by no means rare, and the tree is easily
+recognised, as it is figured with its fruit. The vine, also, was
+one of the plants most cultivated in Palestine, and not merely
+for the grapes, but really for the preparation of wine. The feast
+of the tabernacle of the Jews was a feast on account of the wine
+harvest. From a passage where the cultivation of the vine is
+mentioned, in the Valley of Engeddy, it is evident that the vine
+not only grew in the northernmost mountainous part of the
+country, but also in its southern lower part. Besides these,
+there are other ancient testimonies in favour of the vine. This
+plant, indeed, sometimes occurs on the same coin with the date
+palm. The date-tree, in order to bring its fruit to perfection,
+requires a mean temperature of 78&deg; Fahr. The vine, on the
+other hand, cannot be cultivated to any extent if the mean
+temperature be above 72&deg; Fahr. Such, then, must have been the
+temperature of Palestine, in former ages; and by all that is
+known of its present climate, the mean temperature seems to be
+the same now. Nor has the time of harvest undergone any change.
+Snow and ice, which were known, though rarely, in ancient times,
+are occasionally met with now and at present, as in former times.
+The inhabitants make use of artificial heat to warm
+themselves."&mdash;<i>Dr. Brewster's Journal</i>.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>SPIRIT OF THE PUBLIC JOURNALS.</h2>
+
+<h3>NUISANCES OF SOCIETY.</h3>
+
+<p>It is quite true that the largest part of conversation turns
+upon eating and drinking, the weather, the vices and follies of
+our neighbours, and a thousand other trifles that lead not to
+dispute; and it must be admitted that it is bad companionship to
+be eternally canvassing the greater interests of life, and
+forcing upon society opinions upon things in general. There are,
+indeed, themes in plenty which belong to the neutral ground of
+debate; but it is very pitiable that they should so ill bear
+repetition. All the world, if they dared avow as much, are
+heartily tired of them. Like cursing and swearing, they are
+merely unmeaning expletives to supply the lack of sense, to gain
+time, and to give a man the satisfaction of sometimes hearing his
+own voice. With all the assistance of cards, music, dancing, and
+champagne, society is at best but a dreary business, and it
+requires no little animal spirits to undergo the infliction with
+decency. Are you admitted on terms of familiarity to the domestic
+hearth of your friend, that privilege confers on you the
+opportunity of becoming intimately acquainted with the faults of
+his servants, and (what is worse) with the merits of his
+children.</p>
+
+<p>A dinner of ceremony is a funeral without a legacy; an
+assembly is a mob, and a ball a compound of glare, tinsel, noise,
+and dust. However amusing in their freshness, after a few
+repetitions, they are only rendered endurable by the prospect of
+some collateral gain, or the gratification of personal vanity. To
+exhibit the beauty of a young wife, or the diamonds of an old
+one; to be able to say the best thing that is uttered; to sport a
+red ribbon or a Waterloo medal in their first novelty; to carry a
+point with a great man, or to borrow money from a rich one, may
+pass off an evening very well, with those who happen to be
+interested in such speculations; but, these things apart, the
+arrantest trifler in the circle must get weary at last, and be
+heartily rejoiced when the conclusion of the season spares him
+all further reiteration of the mill-horse operation. It is this
+insipidity of society that forces so many of its members upon
+desperate adventures of gallantry, and upon deep play. Any thing,
+every thing is good to escape from the languor and listlessness
+of a converse from which whatever interests is banished. Many a
+woman loses her character, and many a man incurs a verdict of
+ruinous damages, in the simple search of that rarest of all rare
+things in society&mdash;a sensation. Neither is the matter much
+mended, if, barring the insipidity of bon-ton company, you plunge
+into the formal gravity of the middle classes, or into the noisy,
+empty mirth of the lower. The man of sense and feeling, wherever
+he goes, will find himself in a minority, in which few will speak
+his language or comprehend his ideas. He will seldom return to
+his home without a weary sense of the "stale, flat, and
+unprofitable" nothings he has been compelled to entertain in his
+intercourse with the world,&mdash;without the recollection of
+some outrage on his independence, some dogmatism that he dared
+not question, some impertinence that he dared not confute. With
+his ears ringing with blue-stocking literature, threadbare
+sophistries, forms erected into important principles, mediocrity
+elevated into consideration, and the pre-eminence of the vain,
+the ignorant, and the contemptible, he will shut himself up in
+his solitude, and say with the Englishman at Paris <i>Je m'ennuis
+tr&egrave;s bien ici</i>. Against the recurrence of these
+annoyances, day after day renewed, what nerves can hold out? As
+life advances, time becomes precious, every moment is counted,
+every enjoyment is computed; and while the effort necessary for
+pleasing and being pleased becomes greater, the motive for making
+that exertion grows less. When the sources of physical
+gratification are dried up, and the illusions of life are
+dissipated, there remains nothing for enjoyment but a tranquil
+fireside, and the mastery of our own ideas and of our own habits
+in the privacy of home. But then, to enjoy these, you must not
+have a methodist wife, and you must have a porter who can lie
+with a good grace, a fellow who could say "not at home," though
+death himself knocked at the door. Neither should you read the
+newspapers, nor walk the streets. The times are long gone by
+since "wisdom cried out there." Folly, impertinence, sheer
+impertinence, has exclusive possession of the king's highway; and
+a dog with a tin-kettle at tail has as good a chance as the
+wretch who dares to tread the pavement without partaking of the
+ruling insanity. Oh! Mr. Brougham, Mr. Brougham! your
+schoolmaster has a great deal yet to do: pray heaven his rods and
+his fools' caps may hold out!&mdash;<i>New Month. Mag.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>TO "BEAUTY."</h3>
+
+<pre>
+ The morn is up! wake, Beauty, wake!
+ The flower is on the lea,
+ The blackbird sings within the brake,
+ The thrush is on the tree;
+ Forth to the balmy fields repair,
+ And let the breezes mild
+ Lift from thy brow the falling hair,
+ And fan my little child&mdash;
+ Yet if thy step be 'mid the dews,
+ Beauty! be sure to change your shoes!
+
+ 'Tis noon! the butterfly springs up,
+ High from her couch of rest,
+ And scorns the little blue-bell cup
+ Which all night long she press'd.
+ Away! we'll seek the walnut's shade,
+ And pass the sunny hour,
+ The bee within the rose is laid,
+ And veils him in the flower;
+ Mark not the lustre of his wing,
+ Beauty! be careful of his sting!
+
+ 'Tis eve! but the retiring ray
+ A halo deigns to cast
+ Round scenes on which it shone all day,
+ And gilds them to the last:
+ Thus, ere thine eyelids close in sleep,
+ Let Memory deign to flee
+ Far o'er the mountain and the deep,
+ To cast one beam on me!
+ Yes, Beauty! 'tis mine inmost prayer&mdash;
+ But don't forget to curl your hair!
+</pre>
+
+<p><i>Blackwood's Mag.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h3>GOG AND MAGOG.&mdash;(<i>A Fragment.</i>)</h3>
+
+<p>Pensively and profoundly was I meditating, seated one evening
+upon a stone bench in Guildhall, when, as the gathering gloom
+invested the solemn faces of Gog and Magog, rendering them
+mysteriously dim and indistinct, methought I saw them slowly shut
+their eyes, nod their heads, fall asleep, and actually begin to
+snore. Never did I hear any thing more sonorously grand and awful
+than that portentous inbreathing of Gog and Magog, resounding
+through the Gothic vastness of Guildhall; but, behold! how
+omnipotent is the dreaming imagination! I myself had been dozing;
+the sound of my own nose, transferred by a metonymy of the fancy
+to the nostrils of those wooden idols, had become, as it were,
+the living apotheosis of a snore, which had subdued me by its
+sublimity. Most fortunate was it that I awoke; for, on
+attentively inspecting the faces of the figures, I saw them
+working and writhing with all the contortions of the Pythoness or
+the Sibyl, labouring in the very throes of inspiration,
+struggling with the advent of the prophetical afflatus. At length
+their lips parted, when, in a low, solemn voice, that thrilled
+through the dark, deserted, and silent hall, they poured forth
+alternately the following vaticinal strain, each starting and
+trembling as he concluded:&mdash;</p>
+
+<pre>
+ "From Bank, Change, Mansion-house, Guildhall,
+ Throgmorton, and Threadneedle,
+ From London-stone, and London wall,
+ When City housewife's wheedle
+ To Brunswick, Russell, Bedford Squares,
+ And Portland-place, their spouses,
+ Anxious to give themselves great airs
+ Of fashion in great houses,
+ Then Gog shall start, and Magog shall
+ Tremble upon his pedestal."
+
+ "When merchant, banker, broker, shake
+ In Crockford's club their elbow,
+ And for St. James's clock forsake
+ The chiming of thy bell, Bow:
+ When Batson's, Garraway's, and John's,
+ At night show empty boxes,
+ While cits are playing dice with dons,
+ Or ogling opera doxies;
+ Then Gog shall start, and Magog shall
+ Tremble upon his pedestal."
+
+ "When city dames give routs and reels,
+ And ape high-titled prancers,
+ When City misses dance quadrilles,
+ Or waltz with whisker'd Lancers;
+ When City gold is quickly spent
+ In trinkets, feasts, and raiment,
+ And none suspend their merriment
+ Until they all stop payment,
+ Then Gog shall start, and Magog shall
+ Tremble upon his pedestal."
+</pre>
+
+<p>I was reflecting what dire calamities would fall upon the
+doomed City, since the era of luxury, corruption, and desertion,
+thus denounced, had now manifestly arrived, and Gog and Magog
+were actually starting and trembling upon their pedestals, when
+the hall-keeper, shaking me by the shoulder,
+exclaimed&mdash;"Come, Sir, you musn't be sleeping here all
+night! Bundle out, if you please, for I am just going to shut the
+great gates!"&mdash;<i>New Monthly Mag.</i></p>
+
+<hr>
+<h2>THE GATHERER.</h2>
+
+<blockquote>A snapper up of unconsidered
+trifles.&mdash;SHAKSPEARE.</blockquote>
+
+<h3>MODERN SALAMANDER.</h3>
+
+<p>An experiment to ascertain the degree of heat it is possible
+for a man to bear, was made a few days ago at the New Tivoli, at
+Paris, in the presence of a company of about 200 persons. The man
+on whom this experiment was made is a Spaniard of Andalusia,
+named Martenez, aged 43. A cylindrical oven, constructed in the
+shape of a dome, had been heated for four hours, by a very
+powerful fire. At ten minutes past eight, the Spaniard, having on
+large pantaloons of red flannel, a thick cloak also of flannel,
+and a large felt, after the fashion of straw hats, went into the
+oven, where he remained, seated on a foot-stool, during fourteen
+minutes, exposed to a heat of from 45 to 50 degrees, of a
+metallic thermometer, the gradation of which did not go higher
+than 50. He sang a Spanish song while a fowl was roasted by his
+side. At his coming out of the oven, the physicians found that
+his pulse beat 134 pulsations a minute, though it was but 72 at
+his going in, The oven being healed anew for a second experiment,
+the Spaniard re-entered and seated himself in the same attitude;
+at three quarters past eight, ate the fowl, and drank a bottle of
+wine to the health of the spectators. At coming out his pulse was
+176, and the thermometer indicated a heat of 110 degrees of
+Reaumur. Finally, for the third and last experiment, which almost
+immediately followed the second, he was stretched on a plank,
+surrounded with lighted candles, and thus put into the oven, the
+mouth of which was closed this time. He was there nearly five
+minutes, when all the spectators cried out, "Enough, enough," and
+anxiously hastened to take him out. A noxious and suffocating
+vapour of tallow filled the inside of the oven, and all the
+candles were extinguished and melted. The Spaniard, whose pulse
+was 200 at coming out of this gulf of heat, immediately threw
+himself into a cold bath, and in two or three minutes after was
+on his feet safe and sound.</p>
+
+
+
+<h3>WILL OF MR. WILLIAM HICKINGTON,</h3>
+
+<p><i>Proved in the Deanery Court of York, 1772.</i></p>
+
+<pre>
+ This is my last Will,
+ I insist on it still,
+ So sneer on and welcome
+ And e'en laugh your fill.
+ I, William Hickington,
+ Poet of Pocklington,
+ Do give and bequeathe,
+ As free as I breathe,
+ To thee, Mary Jaram,
+ The queen of my haram,
+ My cash and cattle,
+ With every chattel,
+ To have and to hold,
+ Come heat or come cold,
+ Sans hindrance or strife,
+ (Tho' thou art <i>not</i> my wife,)
+ As witness my hand,
+ Just here as I stand,
+ This 12th of July,
+ In the year seventy &mdash;&mdash;
+
+ Signed, &amp;c. W. HICKINGTON.
+</pre>
+
+<p>J. W. F. B.</p>
+
+
+<h3>REGENT'S PUNCH.</h3>
+
+<p>The receipt for this "nectarious drink" is as
+follows:&mdash;Three bottles of champagne, a bottle of hock, a
+bottle of cura&ccedil;oa, a quart of brandy, a pint of rum, two
+bottles of Madeira, two bottles of seltzer water, four pounds of
+bloom raisins, Seville oranges, lemons, white sugarcandy, and,
+instead of water, green tea. The whole to be highly iced.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<p>The Supplement, containing a fine Portrait of CAPTAIN
+CLAPPERTON, Memoir, &amp;c. and a Title-Page, Preface, and
+copious Index to Vol XI., is now published. It extends beyond the
+usual quantity, the Memoir is of original interest, and the price
+is (in the present instance only) unavoidably advanced to
+Fourpence.</p>
+
+<hr>
+<hr>
+<p><i>Printed and Published by J. LIMBIRD, 143, Strand, (near
+Somerset House,) London; Published by ERNEST FLEISCHER, 626, New
+Market, Leipsic; and Sold by all Newsmen and Booksellers.</i></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Mirror, 1828.07.05, Issue No. 321, by Various
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