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disfigured the face of the country? How account for the hollow roarings of the ſea, and for the instability of the climate for many months before and for the dreadful pauſes that were obſerved to take place, before the buildings were entirely over-turned? It can hardly be doubted but that heaven and earth were combined in compleating our deſtruction. One element alone has been hardly ever known to occaſion ſo extenſive a devaſtation; are the ſudden ſwelling and raging of the ſea, we mmost reaſonably attribute to the heavings of the earthquake; to which likewiſe the general ruin of our houſes may be in ſome meaſure attributed.

I have ſeen the ruins of Liſbon; and if it would not almoſt amount to folly to compare, in the place, great things with ſmall, I ſhould ſay that the deſtruction there, great and melancholy as it was, could only have been, by compariſon of buildings and extent of population, more dreadful that that calamity which I have now the preſumption to deſcribe. The earthquake a Liſbon happened in the morning and although it almoſt univerſally affected its buildings, yet the productions of the earth received, in conſequence, tut little damage, whereas the hurricane in Jamaica continued throughout the night, which has its particular terrors, independently of water, and of wind; and not only blew down every thing within its ſweep, but ſpread deſolation through the country round, and I am apt to believe, that the peculiar diſtreſſes of the unhappy ſufferers of Savanna-la-Mar, muſt have equalled every thing (i ſtill mean by compariſon) that is to be met with in the moſt melancholy annals of human misfortunes.

To this calamity, another unfortunately ſucceeded; and the conſequences of which were ſtill more fatal to the lives of thoſe who had ſurvived the