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82

THE MIXICOLOOIST.

Sir Launcelot Sparcock, iu the"Loudou Prodigal,"

says—

"Drawer,let me have sack for iis old men;

For these girls and knaves small wines are best."

In all probability, the sack of Shakespeare was very

much allied to, if not precisely the same as our sherry;

for Falstaffsays,"You rogue! there is lime iu this sack

too. There is nothing but roguery to be found iu vil

lainous man; yet a coward is worse than sack with lime

in it." And we know that lime is used in the manu

facture of sherry, in order to free it froin a portion of

malic and tartaric acids, and to assist iu producing its

dry quality. Sack is spoken of as late as 1717, iu a

parish register, which allows the minister a pint of it

on the Lord's day, in the winter season; and switt,

writing in 1727, has the lines—

"As clever Tom Clinch, while the rabble was bawling,

Eode stately through Holborn to die of his calling,

He stopped at the'George'for a bottle of sack.

And promised to pay for it when he came back."

He was probably of the same opinion as the Elizabethan

poet, who sang—

"Sacke will make the merry minde be sad,

So will it make the melancholie glad.

If mirthe and sadnesse doth in sacke remain.

When I am sad I'll take some sacke again."