252 THE COMPLETE ANGLER. 



print them at my own charge. Pray what do you call this hill 

 we came down ? 



Piscator. We call it Hanson Toot. 



Viator. Why, farewell, Hanson Toot ! I '11 no more on thee : 

 I '11 go twenty miles about first. Puh! I sweat that my shirt 

 sticks to my back. 



Piscator. Come, sir, now we are up the hill ; and now how 

 do you ? 



Viator. Why, very well, I humbly thank you, sir, and warm 

 enough, I assure you. What have we here a church? 



ASTONFIELD CHT7RCH. 



As I 'm an honest man, a very pretty church. Have you churches 



in this country, sir ? 



unto me, that neither thon, nor any other Mahometan, shall, scot free, tall 

 me Giaur, but that I shall quit you with an answer much to the wonder of 

 those Mahometans. Dixi." 



He died of the flux, occasioned by drinking sack at Surat, in 1617, 

 having published his European travels in a quarto volume, which he called 

 his Crudities ; and to this circumstance the passage in the text is a manifest 

 allusion. See Atfien. Oxon. vol. i. col. 422; Purchase's Pilgrim, parti, hook 

 4, chap. 17 ; Coriate's Letter from the Court of the Great Mogul, quarto, 1616, 

 and, above all, Terry's Voyage, before cited, the author whereof was, as he 

 himself asserts, his chamber-ft'llou-, or tent-mate, in East India. 





