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Untitled Article
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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good as tortoise shell , and a Mullet ttot My ode would < ike fof ^ dlds They mus t have cost a gre&t deal , merely in the carriage ; for # h 6 ii I Asked him ^ rhei'fc theV came from , lie said
this froth Feirafa , and that frotti Bferg&ino . I do iiot want anything tibW ; otily they say that there fe sea about & 11 England . . hdw dan that be ? how can it get over the friountairis ? And that pearls aie found iti oystet-s Is it true ?
You * faithfullest , devotedest , AttRORA . P . S . I am curious to see whether those are real pearls that are found in oysters .
HISTORICAL DOCUMENTS . Collected by the Parroco Spinella . His Highness the Prince Corsifti , waS this day thrown from his horse on Lung' Arno . Many persons were passing : none assisted : one looked down and said to his companion , « 'Let hint lie ; don ' t pick up such ditfty pasta . " How
unlike the good Samaritan ! The Fatroco Spinella did everything iii hid power to alleviate the illustrious sufferer } but fearing td be pelted by the populace for so pibua a workj and seeing ftGrie to help in it , and moreover , having his newest coat on , and-- ' all the Prince ' s clothes
being feoriled ( whfch added greatly to tlwi 6 uflfotings of his High- * iief ^ , ) the Pftrroco Spinella ^ in a < 5 dtii * teou ^ tod ehristiaii-like manner , expressed a hope to his Higlineas ( who groaned
bitterly ) that he was not lmrt > and ? after a second obeisance , went onward and did his duty in his church , it being the Vigil of St Cleophas .
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Yesterday the Princfc Borghese was reunited to the wife of his bosom , and offered to the consumption of his select friends a splendid and most magnificent dinner , in which was a goosed liver weighing four pounds four dunces . The Parroco Spinella
made his inquiries this morning after the health of the illustrious personages , and was informed that his Highness the Prince had suffered from his usual complaints , asthma and indigestion , but that her Highness
the Princess had passed the best night possible , having slept uninterruptedly . If things go on thus placidly , there is ho danger whatever of a fresh separation .
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Ill High and Lm Life in Italy .
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This evening the granduke Ferdinand , of glorious memory , was conveyed to the church of St Lorenzo for interment . Many were apparently very gr ieved : the ParJroco Spinella would willingly have been as much grieved as any , but was afraid that grief on such an occasion might haVe been
misconstrued , and that if the reigning gttoduke Pritice LG& ^ pold should hear of it , he might take it as an ill compliment to himself , and as a want of satisfaction and delight at his ftcCggsion * which nobody cttft fcxperfenee in a greater d&grfca th&fi the Parroco Spinella .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Nov. 1, 1837, page 326, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1837/page/30/
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