Rambles in the Mammoth Cave, during the Year 1844 - By a Visiter by Alexander Clark Bullitt
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page 2 of 70 (02%)
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Page 46th, eighth line from the top--"They are well furnished, and, without question, _would with_ good and comfortable accommodations, pure air, and uniform temperature, cure the pulmonary consumption. _The_ invalids in the Cave ought to be cured, &c.," _read_, They are well furnished, and, without question, _if_ good and comfortable accommodations, pure air, and uniform temperature, _could_ cure the pulmonary consumption, _the_ invalids in the Cave ought to be cured. Page 101, last line: read, "It has no brother: it _is like_ no brother." PUBLISHER'S ADVERTISEMENT. To meet the calls so frequently made upon as by intelligent visitors to our City, for some work descriptive of the Mammoth Cave, we are, at length, enabled to present the public a succinct, but instructive narrative of a visit to this "Wonder of Wonders," from the pen of a gentleman, who, without professing to have explored ALL that is curious or beautiful or sublime in its vast recesses, has yet seen every thing that has been seen by others, and has described enough to quicken and enlighten the curiosity of those who have never visited it. |
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