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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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Vauxhall . Eat fish in Fish Street , especially lobsters , Colchester oysters , and a fresh cod ' s head . . The veal and beef are excellent good in Londou ; the mutton better in several counties in England . A venison pasty and a chine of beef are good every where ; and so are crammed capons and fat chickens . Railes and heath-polts , ruffs , and reeves , are excellent meat wherever they can be m « t with . Puddings of several sorts , and creams of -several fashions , both excellent , but they are seldom to be found , at least in their perfection , at common eating-houses . Mango and saio are two sorts of sauces brought from the East Indies . Bermuda oranges and potatoes , both exceeding good in their kind . Chedder and Cheshire cheese . " Men excellent in their Arts : < c Mr . Cox , in Long Acre , for all sorts of dioptical glasses . ** Mr . Opheel , near the Savoy , for all sorts of machines .
" Mr . — , for a new invention he has , and teaches to copy all sorts of pictures , plans , or to take prospects of places . " The King ' s gunsmith , at the Yard by Whitehall . " Mr . Not , in the Pall Mall , for binding of books . " The Fire-eater . " At an ironmonger ' s , near the May-pole * in the Strand , is to be found a great variety of iron instruments , and utensils of all kinds . fc
^ At Bristol see the Hot-well ; St . George ' Cave > where the Bristol diamonds are found ; Ratcliff Church ; and at Kingwood the coal-pits . Taste there Milford oysters , marrow-puddings , cock-ale , metkeglin , white and red muggets , elvers , sherry , sack ( which , with sugar , is called Bristol milk ); and some other wines , which , perhaps , you will not drink so good at London . . '• At Gloucester observe the whispering place in the Cathedral . "At Oxford see all the colleges , and their libraries ; the schools , and public library ; and the physic-garden . Buy there knives and gloves , especially white kid-skin ; and the cuts of all the colleges graved by hoggins . * ' If you go into the North , see the Peak in Derbyshire , described byHobbs , in a Latin poem , called ' Mirabilia Pecci / :
** Home-made drinks of England are beer and ale , strong and small ; those of most note , that are to be sold , are Lambeth ale , Margaret ale , and Derby ^ ale ; Herefordshire cider , perry , mede . There are also several sorts of compound ales , as cock-ale , wormwood-ale , lemon-ale , scurvygrass-ale , collegeaie > : &c . These are to be had at Hercules Pillars , near the Temple ; at the Trumpet , and other houses in Sheer Lane , Bell Alley ; and , as I remember , at the JSnglish Tavern , near Charing Cross . ¦ ' i * j 1 I Foreign -drinks to be found in England are all sorts of Spanish , Oreeky Italian , Rhenish , and other wines , which are to be got up and down at several taverns * . CofFe " , the " , and chocolate , at coffee-houses . Mum at the mumand
houses , -and other places ^ Molly , a drink of Barbadoes , by chance at some Bar badoes merchants . Punch , a compounded drink , on board some West India ships ; and Turkish sherbet amongst the merchants . f ' Manufactures of doth , that will keep out rain : flanel , knives , looks and keys ; scabbards for swords ; several things wrought in steel , as little boxes , heads foif canes , boots , riding * -whips , Rippon spurs , saddles , &c . ' •* f At Nottingham dwells a man who makes fans , hatbands , necklaces , and other things of glass , drawn out into very small threads / 3 - *—Pp . 133- ^ k 36 . lh
v . ^)^ er-d , foj | o ^ ipg query ( estate *! qs it stands in the rmal . of March £ , 1687 ) { pojiit , ? It looks something like = an anticipation of ; the vie ws . of gome modern German theologians on the subject ) of , itispiratioi ) i ** Wither tniri g ^ bpjth ^ pr . aj an 4 Wsiprjca ^ , Vrjt ,, ( as other . fl ' u ci * n > att , ers are * byjpm liable . ^ o thp ^^ p ^ e naj ^ jtak ^ s ^ and ' fraijties , m ^ y not yet foe ? por ^ red by rProvidence , ^ to , bfi , $ ev $ wn Jfulea ini ' utmq ag ^ s ^ pr ^\ gniftcutians pf future eveim , zid $ eiiMt togujde / tluaee wlio are jsia ^ erq dn < juir ^ 4 ^ after truth
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644 lAfe of John Locke .
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), Sept. 2, 1829, page 644, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct2576/page/44/
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