tle themſelves, join three, or four, or more of them together, according as their Families are in largeneſs, and buy a Carcaſs; but as I before obſerved, they are Perſons of Conſideration who eat any at all, the Natives in general, both Rich and Poor, and all the Iriſh who inhabit in the Iſland, living almoſt wholly on Herrings and Potatoes; the former of which, are pickled up in the Seaſon, and laſt the whole Year.
This Iſland, therefore may be ſaid to fit all Conditions, and all Diſpoſitions, the Poor and the Parſimonious may live as cheap, and as miſerable as they wiſh; and People, who have full Pockets and elegant Taſtes, need want nothing to indulge the Luxury of the moſt Epicurean Appetite.
Nor does the Eye wants its Entertainment too; tho' there are no Plays nor magnificent Sights to dazle it, here is every Charm that Nature can beſtow, Rocks, Vales, Mountains, Rivers, Gardens, ſcatter'd promiſcuouſly in the moſt beautiful, tho' wild, Variety imaginable. The Groves indeed, in which Lovers