The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 12, No. 335, October 11, 1828 by Various
page 35 of 50 (70%)
page 35 of 50 (70%)
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dinner.
Would you then sleep tranquilly after your meal, and never fear those dreams which are so fatal to _gourmands_, quaff your coffee; it will fall like dew upon your lips, and sweetly temper with all those juices which oppress your exhausted stomach. If you can, drink your coffee without sugar, for then it preserves its natural flavour, and is much more efficacious than when mixed with other ingredients. Laugh at the doctors who tell you that hot coffee irritates the stomach and injures the nerves; tell them that Voltaire, Fontenelle, Stacey, and Fourcroy, who were great coffee-drinkers, lived to a good old age. The _brochure_, for such it is, is wound up with "the natural history of coffee," and an appendix of "English receipts," &c. * * * * * PERILS OF THE WAR OF INDEPENDENCE IN SOUTH AMERICA. A work of extraordinary and soul-stirring interest has lately appeared on the Revolutions of South America. It is entitled "Memoirs of General Miller, in the Service of the Republic of Peru," and is compiled from private letters, journals, and recollections, by the brother of the general. From this portion of the work we gather that William Miller, the companion in arms of San Martin and Bolivar, was born in Kent, in 1795. He served with the British army in Spain and America, from 1811 till the peace of 1815. In 1816 and 1817, he devoted some attention to mercantile affairs; but being of an ardent spirit he finally resolved to engage as a |
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