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known, as also the injunction of not playing it on pain of death, before the regiments of that nation, in the service of France and Holland.] [Footnote Aa: Optima quaeque dies, etc.] [Footnote Bb: This shrine is resorted to, from a hope of relief, by multitudes, from every corner of the Catholick world, labouring under mental or bodily afflictions.] [Footnote Cc: Rude fountains built and covered with sheds for the accommodation of the pilgrims, in their ascent of the mountain. Under these sheds the sentimental traveller and the philosopher may find interesting sources of meditation.] [Footnote Dd: This word is pronounced upon the spot Chamouny, I have taken the liberty of reading it long thinking it more musical.] [Footnote Ee: It is only from the higher part of the valley of Chamouny that Mont Blanc is visible.] [Footnote Ff: It is scarce necessary to observe that these lines were written before the emancipation of Savoy.] [Footnote Gg: A vast extent of marsh so called near the lake of Neuf-chatel.] [Footnote Hh: This, as may be supposed, was written before France became the seat of war.] [Footnote Ii: An insect so called, which emits a short, melancholy cry, heard, at the close of the summer evenings, on the banks of the Loire.] [Footnote Jj: The river Loiret, which has the honour of giving name to a department, rises out of the earth at a place, called La Source, a league and a half south-east of Orleans, and taking at once the character of a considerable stream, winds under a most delicious bank on its left, with a flat country of meadows, woods, and vineyards on its right, till it falls into the Loire about three or four leagues below Orleans. The hand of false taste has committed on its banks those outrages which the Abbe de Lille so pathetically deprecates in those charming verses descriptive of the Seine, visiting in secret the retreat of his friend Watelet. Much as the Loiret, in its short course, suffers from injudicious ornament, yet are there spots to be found upon its banks as soothing as meditation could wish for: the curious traveller may meet with some of them where it loses itself among the mills in the neighbourhood of the villa called La Fontaine. The walks of La Source, where it takes its rise, may, in the eyes of some people, derive an additional interest from the recollection that they were the retreat of Bolingbroke during his exile, and that here it was th
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