FOU 
mthree pints of water, till the pes are foft and fin ; 
then pour off the decoG on. an ein it an ounce of 
add four ounces of ‘infeed oil. 
horfe have ed handfals of this mixture every te 
fafting, till appetite abates. are fhould alfo 
taken to keep fle falls asclean as poflible. Gibfon’s oe 
riery. 
Your Bay, in Geography, a bay onthe N. E. coaft of 
the ifland of Barbadoes. —Alfo, a bay on the S. coaft, near 
ty of the ifland see ca N. lat. 37° 54 
W. ih 75° 56..—Alfo, a bay o - coaft of th 
_ of Java. S.lat.8° 38’. E. ome 113 a 
out Lfland, a {mall ifland in ee “Chincle mae near the 
ae of Cochinchina. . lat '", E. long. 108° 53!. 
a {mall ifland in the a Bengal near ae coalt 
of A N. Jat. 18° 12’. E. long. g4° 11’. 
L Ulands, a clufter of fmall iflands in the Eaft In- 
dian. ca, near the N. coaft of the ifland of Flores. S. 
lat. 8° E. long. 124° 22!. 
j Point, a cape on the E. coaft of Madagafcar. S. 
° 50! ie cape is ae by oe 
place moft fre 
9 50. 
oolou-voolou 3’? and i 
e pafflage is about 
50 fa thoms, and it is nearly of the fame depth ; 3 it will hold 
oored all in a line. 
The harbour is 
and 2 thefe 
ormed by c 
ores, ftar- 
are various fea-plants, moffes, black corals, madre 
corate the cabinets of the curious. th of hos river 
prefen aul 
configuration. Ships may be Toticd mae Kf oe of pro- 
vifions, which are various and abundant. The villages inha- 
bited by the tribe of * Voolou-voolow”’ are not very confidera- 
ble ; they are fortified with palifades; moft of them are ere@- 
ed upon the declivity of hills, and they are delightfully thaded 
ya great | number ofu uleful tre ees. The diltri& of Voo 
es lou afture groun nds, and a great 
number of ae The river Oe. which fuddenly Jofes 
itfelf in the fands at the diftance of 400 fathoms from its 
up to a diftance of more than 20 leagues is, however, 
infefted wi great number of monftrous crocodiles, ae 
find a fecure retreat among the trees thal. cover its 
‘out Sound, a ftrai affage on the weft of Ireland. 
¥t is between Tnifmain and Innifhere, two of the fouth ifles 
of Arran, which lie at the entrance of Galway bay. Betides 
a great rock, there is an extenfive fhoal, which renders nen 
nota good paflage. 
A, one of - Picci apie which is narrow, 
pee and rocky, abou miles in le oo ae affords 
patture. 
its inbab tant in number t 150, are 
amok in a ftate of nature. It has one indifferent he 
place. Onthe W. coait are cn precipices. 5 up. 
wards of feven leagues W. m the broadeft oe : 
_Some wiiters as ‘fuppoted this ifland t 
itus and the ancients 
t a Thule”? of Tac 
N. lat. 60° 6!. W. lon ng. 2° 47, 
FO » Fount, or PuoLey, a country of sA\frica, 
bordering on the river Senegal, and extending about 480 
miles from eaft to weft ; the boundaries from north to fouth 
being unknown. This country is populous, and the {vil fer- 
FOU 
tile, and capable of furnifhing an advantageous commerce, 
if the inhabitants were indultrio Their complexion is 
generally tawny, thoug h many oof them are black; and it 
1 the Moors, 
Althou gh a are anise in availing t denies of = ad- 
vantages of commerce, they a are diligent as ae 
ziers 3 and raife millet, rice, toba:co, cotton, ni pealey 10 
and fruits in abundance ; nor are they lefs exper in ane 
cattle, which is the ftaple of their traffic with neighbour. 
Their cattle conttitute their chief wealt hy 
> 85 removing, 
as the wet and dry feafons require, hon ci iba to the hig 
lands, and continuing no longer in one place than the paf- 
ture for their cattle will allow. The inconvenience and 
labour of this roving life are augmented by the defence 
they are obliged to provide again{t the depredations of the 
fierce animals with which the country abouids; as 
are molette s from the laud, 
and At night they collect their 
herds and flocks within a circle of huts and tents in which 
they live, and where they light fires in order 
deter thele animals from approaching them The king of 
the country, called Siratic, though commonly deftitute of the 
badges of majett y> Pp poffeffes great authority among his fub- 
one on the c 1] 
to fon, but trom brother to brother, and eolee to nephew. 
The Foulahs are celebrated by travellers as a people ex- 
tremely hofpitable ; all perfons, whatever be the country to 
which ‘they belong, vi reely admitted into their huts, 
and treated with the accommodation they can afford ; 
nor is their soa le wo mime of notice than their hof- 
pitality, for as foo any one of them has the misfortune 
to fall into eas all the reit ion n their ftock to redeem 
him. Their arms confit of bows and arrow ance: 
Byer ds, daggers, and occafionaily a kind of {mall ite 3 “i 
which they ufe with a fingu ilar dexterity, efpecially in 
ees se is a neha to which they are much at. 
e game y; pur uriue coniitts of Dae 
hons, tigers e, and the fered animals. The 
phants, the fins of lions, leopards, 
them, and the fichh is dried and fmoked for u 
winter ftore. ‘The elephants are fo numerous, that the 
appear in droves of 2co together, plucking up the fmall 
Jeftroying whole fields of corn; fo that they 
eat not merely asa pattime, but as 
the means of felf-prefervati 
FOULDAGE. See Tee, 
OULNESS, in Geography, anifland with a church vil- 
lage, feparated by a narrow channel, or arm of the German 
ccean, from the main land of England, and 8.E. part of the 
yal of a about 12 miles in circumference, 6 miles E. 
£ Rochfor 
eee of Colours, in Painting, is ufed i in oe 
to brightnefs, and denotes a defect of purity. It 
times called breaging the colour. 
FOULON, or Foutton, Josn Erarp, in Biography, Y 
was bor at aa - an ancient and diftinguifhed family, 
in a year 1609: 1625 he entered the order of the 
uits. He ha ae meses ae and capable 
. yraipine every aac h of fcien s tutors eget 
that his 1 Capron were pees 1 anes to the duties 
a preacher, took care to inftruét him in the “requilites 
for ceeaes the one and he became celebrated for 
his 
OmMmee 
