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better. However, this made me ſo cautious for the future, that I avoided paſſing near certain places, where the ſtench was ſo exceſſive that people began to dread an infection: a gentleman told me, that going into the town a few days after the earthquake, he ſaw ſeveral bodies lying in the ſtreets, ſome horribly mangled, as he ſuppoſed, by the dogs, others half burnt, ſome quite roaſted; and that in certain places, particularly near the doors of churches, they lay in vaſt heaps piled one upon another.'

Extracted from a Volume of Letters, publiſhed a few years ago by the Reverend Mr. Davy--See Gregory's Economy of Nature vol 2nd. page 396, to 375 incluſive, ſecond edition.

EARTHQUAKES,

In Calabria and Sicily, in 1783.

The year 1783 was fatally marked by the deſolation of ſome of the moſt fertile, moſt beautiful, and moſt celebrated provinces of Europe. The two Calabrias, with a part of Sicily, were doomed to be a ſcene of the moſt tremendous, and the moſt fatal earthquakes that ever were known, even in thoſe volcanic regions. The firſt ſhock happened about noon, on the 5th of February, and was ſo violent as to involve almoſt the whole of Calabria in ruin. This was but the commencement of a ſucceſſion of earthquakes, which beginning from the city of Amantea, on the coaſt of the Tyrrhene ſea, proceded along the weſtern coaſt to Cape Spartivento, and up the eaſtern as far as Cape D Alice, during the whole of which ſpace not a town was left undeſtroyed.

During two years repeated ſhocks continued to