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they are my cousins; and I would shake an honest cousin by the hand tho' he were in wooden shoes, with more pleasure than I would the honest Chancellor, who put them _so unexpectedly_ upon a better footing. I think, by the _laws_ of England, no money is to be transported into other kingdoms; by the JUSTICE of it, it may, and is;--if so, law and justice are still at variance; which puts me in mind of what a great man once said upon reading the confirmation of a decree in the House of Lords, from an Irish appeal:--"It is (said he) so very absurd, inconsistent, and intricate, that, in truth, I am afraid it is really made according to law." LETTER IX. NISMES. On our way here we eat an humble meal; which was, nevertheless, a most grateful _repas_, for it was under the principal arch of the _Pont du Gard_. It will be needless to say more to you of this noble monument of antiquity, than that the modern addition to it has not only made it more durable, but more useful: in its original state, it conveyed only horse and man, over the River _Gordon_, (perhaps _Gardon_) and water, to the city of _Nismes_. By the modern addition, it now conveys every thing over it, but water; as well as an high idea of Roman magnificence; for beside the immense expence of erecting a bridge of a triple range of arches, over a river, and thereby uniting the upper arches to the mountains on each side, the source from whence the water was conveyed, is six leagues distant from _Nismes_. The bridge is twenty-four _toises_ high, and above an hundred and thirty-three in length, and was _my sole property_ for near three hours; for during that time, I saw neither man nor beast come near it; every thing was so still and quiet, except the murmuring stream which runs gently under two or three of the arches, that I could almost have persuaded myself, from the silence, and rude scenes which every way presented themselves, that all the world were as dead as the men who erected it. That side of the bridge where none of the modern additions appear, is nobly fillagreed by the hand of time; and the other side is equally pleasing, by being a well executed support to a building which, without its aid, would in a few ages more have fallen into ruins. I was astonished to find so fine a building standing in so pleasant a spot, and which offers so many invitations to make it the abode of some hermit, quite destitute of such an inhabitant; but it did not affor
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