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ds, their fruit, their tares, Not looking ere they leap. We, like the folks in Jamie's book{11} Will i' the dark sharp up our hook, And, my own Barnard, reap. 9 Dr. S---------e, a very singular, but a very hearty kind of Caleb Quotem. He has been soldier, and sailor, doctor, and, I believe, divine. He is as well known at the best parties as the Wells and the Market-house. He gives feasts fit for the gods at home, and invariably credits his neighbours' viands as being Jove's nectar or the fruits of Paradise, so as to him they be not forbidden. Short commons could not upset his politeness. His anecdotes have a spice of the old courtier about them; but the line old _chanson a boire_, from Gammar Gurton's Needle, "Back and side go bare, go bare, Both foot and hand go cold; But belly, God send good ale enough, Whether it be new or old;" he really gives beautifully, and with a spice of the olden time quite delightful. 10 Mr. Naylor, of the Plough hotel; an excellent Boniface, a good friend, and a merry companion. As a boy, I recollect him keeping the Castle at Marlborough; at "frisky eighteen," I have contributed to his success at the Crown at Portsmouth; and I now, older, and it may be, a little wiser grown, patronize him occasionally at Cheltenham. 11 Vide Hogg's Brownie of Bodsbeck. A TRIP TO THE SPAS. ~243~~ CHAPTER II. The Spas--Medicinal Properties--Interesting specimens of the Picturesque--"Spasmodic Affections from Spa Waters"-- Grotesque Scripture--The Goddess Hygeia--Humorous Epitaph-- Characters in the High Street--Traveller's Hall, or Sketches in the Commercial Room at the Bell Inn, Cheltenham. "For walks and for waters, for beaux and for belles, There's nothing in nature to rival their wells." Inquisitive traveller, if you would see the Well-walks in perfection, you must rise early, and take a sip of the saline aperients before you taste of the more substantial meal which the _Plough_-man. Naylor, or the Cheltenham _Bell_-man, or the _Shep-herd_ of the _Fleece_, will be sure to prepare for your morning mastication. Fashion always requires some talismanic power to draw her votaries together, beyond the mere healthful attractions of salubrious air, pleasant rides, romantic scenery, and cheerful societ
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