Want of Accommodation at the Inn. 393 



that it cannot be recollected but with feelings 

 of the most unpleasant nature ; and to complete 

 our disgust, we were most grossly imposed on, 

 while the landlord had the effrontery to declare 

 he was the only honest and loyal man in the 

 town. The written vouchers which he produced 

 were not testimonials of the former, and I 

 greatly doubt his being able to produce any evi- 

 dence of the latter. The poor horses were 

 worse off than ourselves, which made our abode 

 still more intolerable. We shall start with the 

 next light of day, impatient, not only for objects 

 that await us, but to escape from ills hardly to 

 be endured. Adieu. 



J. C. C. 



