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THE

CONNOISSEUR.

BY MR. TOWN,

CRITIC AND CENSOR-GENERAL.

.Non de villis domibusve alienis,

Nec male necne lepos saltet; sed quod magis ad nos
Pertinet, et nescire malum est, agitamus........

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1803.

MO

AL

HOR.

TED FOR SAMUEL F. BRADFORD, NO. 4, S THIRD STREET,
AND JOHN CONRAD AND CO. NO. 30, CHESNUT STREET.

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On the want of learning in land-officers.

On the excursions of young academics to London.

Steele's character of young Bookwit, an Oxo-

nian. Conversation between two in the Bedford

Coffee-house, and a set of them at the Shaks-

peare. Journal of a week's transactions of an

Oxonian in town. Ode, imitated from Horace,

sent by a fellow collegian to one of these aca-

demical rakes.

Absurdity of Lord Bolingbroke representing Mo-

ses as making beasts accountable for crimes.

Trial of Beasts, a vision. Indictment against

an hog, a cat, a parrot, a milch-ass, a monkey,

a lion, and other animals.

Letter from Mr. Village, concerning elections.

Account of a borough town divided into two

parties, Christians and Jews. An Anti-Judaic

entertainment. Character of a country knight,

a violent enemy to the Jews.

Letter, complaining of the Whisperers and Gig-

lers among the Fair-sex. Instance of their rude

behaviour during a visit. Whispering and Gig-

ling improper at church, in the play-house, and

other places.

98

103

On bets particularly on the custom of pitting, as

practised at White's; i.e. staking one man's

life against another. Character of Montano a

noble gamester.

Letter from Oxford, on the story of Shakspeare's

Merchant of Venice. Copy of an original bal-

lad, (preserved in the Ashmolean Museum)

from which Shakspeare is supposed to have

borrowed part of his plot.
108

116

122

XV1I. Letter, proving the city of London to be an Uni-
versity. Arts and sciences taught there in great-

er perfection than at Oxford or Cambridge.

XVIII. On the dishonesty of Connoisseurs. Instances of

it, and punishment proposed for it. Story of a

Virtuoso's design to rob a church.

Letter, on the different tastes in eating. Luxury
at White's. Difference between the taverns
about St. James's and the 'Change. Of the
taverns about Covent-Garden. Story of a cook
at one of them, tossing up the shoe of a fille
de joye in a ragout. Characters to be met with
at chop-houses, &c.......Letter from Goliah Eng-

XIX.

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