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The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 20, No. 565, September 8, 1832 by Various
page 23 of 52 (44%)
Greenock, Catrine, Maxwelltown, Dumfries, &c. The principal markets
for the snuff-boxes are London, Liverpool, Glasgow, and Edinburgh.
At one time large lots of boxes were exported to South America, and
probably are so at present. Cumnock, in a word, in regard to its
staple manufacture, is in that palmy state so well described by a
modern writer:--"the condition most favourable to population is that
of a laborious, frugal people ministering to the demands of opulent
neighbours; because this situation, while it leaves them every
advantage of luxury, exempts them from the evils which accompany its
admission into a country. Of the different kinds of luxury, those are
the most innocent which afford employment to the greatest number of
artists and manufacturers; or those in which the price of the work
bears the greatest proportion to that of the raw material." Some very
wretched imitations of Cumnock boxes have been produced in different
parts of England; but they can deceive no one who ever saw a genuine
box. The hinge, as well as the finishing, is clumsy in the extreme.

[Mr. Macculloch acknowledges himself indebted for this
curious and instructive article to his esteemed friend "John
M'Diarmid, Esq. Editor of the _Dumfries Courier_, one of the
best provincial papers published in the empire."

By the way, what a colossal labour must have been the
preparation of the above Dictionary. How it reminds us of
the words of poor, patient Antony Wood: "What toyle hath been
taken, as no man thinketh, so no man believeth, but he that
hath made the trial." Yet it has often occurred to us that
the compiler, or editor, as he is complimentarily called, is
barely treated with proper respect in these days. What is
all knowledge but a continued accumulation and comparison of
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