The Repository of arts, literature, commerce, manufactures, fashions and politics . f an interesting nature, suitable for ourSelections, will be acceptable. If J. J. ivould favour us with the remainder of the translation front Count Verri,we should be enabled to decide respecting its insertion. The lines signed A Mother have appeared as an advertisement in many of the news-papers: our advertising sheet is equally open to them. Persons who reside abroad, and who wish to be supplied with this Work every Month aspublished, may have it sent to them, free of Postage, to New-York, Halifax, Quebec, a


The Repository of arts, literature, commerce, manufactures, fashions and politics . f an interesting nature, suitable for ourSelections, will be acceptable. If J. J. ivould favour us with the remainder of the translation front Count Verri,we should be enabled to decide respecting its insertion. The lines signed A Mother have appeared as an advertisement in many of the news-papers: our advertising sheet is equally open to them. Persons who reside abroad, and who wish to be supplied with this Work every Month aspublished, may have it sent to them, free of Postage, to New-York, Halifax, Quebec, andto any part of the West Indies, at £i 12s. per Annum, by Mr. Thoiinhill, of the GeneralPost-Office, at No. 21, Sherborne-Lane; to Hamburgh, Lisbon, Cadiz, Gibraltar, Malta, orany Part of the Mediterranean, at £4 12s. per Annum, by Mr. Skujkant, of the GeneralPost-Office, at No. 22, Sherborne-lane ; and to the Cape of Good Hope, or any part of theEast Indies, by Mr. Guy, at the East-India House. The money to be paid at the time ofsubscribing, for cither 3, 6, 9, or 13 the Beposttorp ARTS, LITERATURE, FASHIONS, Manufactures, §c. THE SECOND SERIES. Vol. V. May 1, 1818. IN ° XXIX. PICTURESQUE TOUR OF MOUNT SIMPLON. (Continued from p. 192.)PLATE 27.—VIEW OF SION. The valley which is traversed bythe Rhone, and which runs fromnorth to south from the Lake ofGeneva, suddenly changes its di-rection beyond Pissevache, turnseastward, and begins to you reach Martigny, whichis situated at the angle of this curve,you first cross the Trient, the bedof which, confined by enormouswalls of rocks, receives the watersthat descend from the valley of Va-lorsme, and afterwards the impe-tuous torrent of the Drance, whichcollects those of the glaciers of theGreat St. Bernard : all these wa-ters discharge themselves into thelihone. Martigny contains no-thing remarkable except the con-vent of the monks who attend theHospice of the Great St. Bernard,and that of the Simplon. Th


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