The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 20, No. 574, November 3, 1832 Title by Various
page 50 of 51 (98%)
page 50 of 51 (98%)
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he might have found an opportunity in the well-known line of the sixth book
of the _Iliad_-- [Greek: Aideomas Trôas ai Trôadas elkesipeplous.] I dread the Trojan ladies, yard-long-tail'd; Of which Pope makes this sweeping periphrasis-- "And Troy's proud dames, whose garments sweep the ground." E.B.I. * * * * * _Burton Ale._--Many of our readers may recollect the dispute, about three years since, between the Burton Ale brewers and the Useful Knowledge Society, when the excellence of the ale was proved to be the result of the hard water of which it was manufactured flowing over a limestone rock. A chemist was dispatched to Burton, and the settlement of the matter assumed the importance of a discovery; though in the last century this fact was ingeniously explained by Dr. Darwin, in a letter to Mr. Pilkington, upon the supposition that some of the saccharine matter in the malt combines with the calcareous earth of hard waters, and forms a sort of mineral sugar, which, like true sugar, is convertible into spirits. |
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