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786%! H
' On the impression of cold ; the sur-
‘ "itself.
‘. -the lungs. or the bowels. '
= mabmtY'3 it is the efledb
V, of
l cnanhali Cimgh 3-I-Cough" 'would be 1
thing for a glass-blowers...
;:w““ld. be as awkward as in a trum- ‘
, N A . ,
.-onllcln nations do. ’-‘Ind.-ed‘ it 1:’
rou"NovsMnan, I-.8lll.7-v--r ' . .l
..c% . V
Whereas. the person from the cr'oivd-
th ""’m'15 much weakened in energy,‘
‘-’ ‘Ystem cannot re-act" sulliciently‘
Eclnlled, the teeth chatter‘, the‘
lam wisttie cold, the blood. accumu-
mus m "b": and the oppressed mu-.
mater em runes talfe onian xnilanir
. Y 301109. which soon evmees
by a dcfluction from f the nose,
so there is a disease very lilze ‘this,
and tw':‘33 , ‘Caught ;by the vigorous
apzr-mm, ,U5t,: by going vinto “a warm
a&era?1l“: Or near‘to a hot‘ iire,
an ‘cm Q7155 cxposivzre to cold ; it is
.agenC e in amination, caused by the
. Y of heat oraccumulated ex-l
of ‘ oin
f!?tn;.r‘(:]O1d1>‘1PIl.g,c0nllnu6;d, intogheatg;
‘Mon ‘'1 into cold; such a.tran-
nor smith """“" '."su"=; the -robust
dew ‘<3 ehcate,‘ unless previously
llanid > ll)’ ‘ bad. air, " . or unusual
Ptfspiratton. .-
to YOU find your cookmore aub-
wm” "i0Id; than your own tnaid?
so . "P edge myself that she I3 less.
maztedoziifithstanding she is almost
ml, . "'0 during an hour at least‘
Yday,- my . . , ; .,
mui:o$a)'0llr baker cough or sneeze
not‘ It yourbutchert’ I dare say
yol and lmrhaps not.-so-. much as
"',‘’‘'''D footman. . "
cdygrfh 3"8‘3f-bakers ‘more liable to‘
the co all w.']?rs 3 ‘ BY “‘““‘33“3r"“'
nl’-I7-lr . - .-y 9 .‘ i 4'
D3] glass-blowers, or. the nnnealers
‘"3 labour “ frequently under.
ltct
lm"“'liWar
morgfsh db not believe they are
other meject to such a cough than
daily ffo "' FhY6t. all these people pass '
m“ cm’? E efire into. the..o.pen. air,
H‘ C l:‘""Y With flshttle myury, '
what ti ave seen in ‘the last essay -7
,em.i ‘e."Romans did.-We -have ;
I1 this what the Eastern -and
‘ass
what nature" imposes on' ‘everv .n1an, -
and every woman‘ too, at least once"; '
in their lives A; :I mean at their birth,;
a change of temperatm=e’from.90“ .
often.to-a degree of cold much.be- -.
lotvthat of the coldest bath 5 but by
this change of temperature, re-action
18 produced ; onwhichthe "very con-' ‘
tmuance of existence depends.. It is .
an exemplary lesson as to the safety
and utilityof the practice I would
recommend, written in the book of
nature by the Author of all Truth.
‘There are many institutions in this‘
country that give certain facility to‘
the application of alternated tempew
rature to the human body; but the
subject’ is as yet but little understood, V '
and less practised at-these establish-
ments; "I shall notenter into a de-
tailed account of any of them ; it
exceed the limits of an essay.
however, give an outline of the bath:
lately erected at Tenby, by Sir W'm.
Paxton, because they are atronce the
most classical and eiiicient in the
“kingdom ; ‘besides, being situate on
a limestone peninsula," washed by the
seas of the Atlantic ocean, they pos-
sess an enviable superiority in point
of air and sea-waterg .V 2 n
-'-The natural advantages of Tcnby
are, -it's'dry healthful "situation, its
I Wil.l,,‘-.'
fine beach, and transparent sea : these.‘
alone had drawn the votaries ofhealtlz
to the ‘south of ‘Wales duringmany
successive years; but the open sea
was not applicable to all, :: I baths of
higher temperatures were required to
-remove the weariness of fatigue, to
excite the languid circulation of the
feeble,‘ to allay theairritability ofthe,
nervous ; and above all to rformgav
chain of temperatures of air, of;-on-5 A
pour, and ‘of sea, applicable,"citli'cr ,
singly or combined, to',evciy.sli:ide' '
of disease‘. ‘
'-'l'h'e building
"4:
is a chaste Grecian ‘
elevation, by Mr.“Ciclterell, an arch!-'
tect of a fine-taste.-' Immediately“
over the am of the vestibule, he has
1
placed a compicuous Greek inscrip- .
. 3%
‘Lion,