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, when in comparison it was but a village, the old writers state that in the city, and all round it were a great number of pits and ditches, and sloughs, which were made the receptacle of all kind of filth, dead and putrid horses, and cattle, &c. In the time of Henry VIII. many parts are described as "exceedingly foul and full of pits and sloughs, and very noisome," and some years after (1625) in a tract, the author says, "Let not carkasses of horses, dogs, cats, &c. lye rotting and poisoning the aire, as they have done in _More_ and _Finsbury_ Fields, and elsewhere round about the cittie. Let the ditches towards Islington, Olde-street, and towards Shoreditch and Whitechapel, be well cleansed." In another tract published in 1665, it states, that "there are all sorts of unsavoury stenches, proceeding either from carrion, ditches, rotten dung-hills, vaults, sinks, nasty kennels, and streets, (strewed with all manner of filth) seldom cleansed." From these statements it is evident that notwithstanding all the present inconveniences that the inhabitants of London live in more healthy situations now that they are surrounded by houses, than when they were exposed to extensive open fields. A.B.C. [1] It was reckoned an extraordinary luxury for Thomas a Becket to have his parlour strewed every day with clean rushes. * * * * * A PORTRAIT. _Sketched in the year of the world,_ 5831; _and, of my bachelorship_, 24. (_For the Mirror._) Chaste, as the icicle, That's curded by the frost from purer snow, And hangs on Dian's temple; Dear--_old maid_. SHAKSPEARE'S _Coriolanus_. Sed mihi vel tellus optem prius ima dehiscat, Vel Pater omnipotens adigat me fulmine ad umbras, Pallentes umbras Erebi, noctemque profundum, Ante, pudor, quam te violem, aut tua jure resolvam. VIRGIL. I have years on my back _forty-eight_, SHAKSPEARE'S _King Lear_. Four-and-twenty lap-dogs, all of a row, Four-and-twenty monkeys, kits, and cats, dit-to; Four-and-twenty colours in her tawdry dress, (A rainbow she in all--but its loveliness!) Four-and-twenty tempers, in the four-and-twenty hours; Four-and-twenty dreams of _suppos'd_ vanquished pow'rs, To wit of four-and-twenty swains--more or less; Who have four-and-twenty times, curs'd her ugliness! Four-and-twenty trials, ere as many hours are o'er, Of four-and-twenty genera of rival Kalydor;
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