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explain the meaning of "_la langue Pandras_." D.C. * * * * * NOTES ON THE SECOND EDITION OF MR. CUNNINGHAM'S HANDBOOK OF LONDON. 21. _New Tunbridge Wells, at Islington._--This fashionable morning lounge of the nobility and gentry during the early part of the eighteenth century, is omitted by Mr. Cunningham. There is a capital view of it in Bickham's _Musical Entertainer_, 1737: "These once beautiful tea-gardens (we remember them as such) were formerly in high repute. In 1733 their Royal Highnesses the Princesses Amelia and Caroline frequented them in the summer time for the purpose of drinking the waters. They have furnished a subject for pamphlets, poems, plays, songs, and medical treatises, by Ned Ward, George Colman the older, Bickham, Dr. Hugh Smith, &c. Nothing now remains of them but the original chalybeate spring, which is still preserved in an obscure nook, amidst a poverty-stricken and squalid rookery of misery and vice."--George Daniel's _Merrie England in the Olden Time_, vol. i. p. 31. 22. _London Spa_ (from which Spa Fields derives its name) dates as far back as 1206. In the eighteenth century, it was a celebrated place of amusement. There is a curious view of "London Spaw" in a rare pamphlet entitled _May-Day, or, The Original of Garlands_. Printed for J. Roberts, 1720, 8vo. 23. _Spring Gardens._--Cox's Museum is described in the printed catalogue of 1774, as being in "Spring Gardens." In the same year a small volume was published containing _A Collection of various Extracts in Prose and Verse relative to Cox's Museum_. 24. _The Pantheon in Spa Fields._--This place of amusement was opened in 1770 for the sale of tea, coffee, wine, punch, &c. It had an organ, and a spacious promenade and galleries. In 1780 it was converted into a lay-chapel by the Countess of Huntingdon, and is now known as _Northampton_ or _Spa Fields Chapel_. Mr. Cunningham speaks of the burying-ground (originally the garden), but singularly enough omits to notice the chapel. 25. _Baldwin's Gardens_, running between Leather Lane and Gray's Inn Lane, were, according to a stone which till lately was to have been seen against a corner house, bearing the arms of Queen Elizabeth, named after _Richard Baldwin_, one of the royal gardeners, who began building here in 1589. 26. _Rathbone Place._--In an old print (now before me) dated 1722, this street is ca
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