Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CHAPTER II. A thirsty countrySwizzlesGeorgetown ClubVisits of the fleet SwizzleianaPepper-potMiss Gerty's kittenPlantersMr. Henry ClementsonHis burglaryMedical ServiceOld-time doctors The BarDick WhitfieldLynch Samuel T. Fitz-HerbertMacaronic versesChurch endowmentsCake walksRally of the tribes Ladies in British GuianaSexual relationsEstablishments Children of the poorQuasi-slaveryRoman Dutch lawEmancipation of womenTigress of Tiger BayTim SugarAssaulting the sheriff. These is great truth in the soldier's remark that Demerara was a " rare place where there's lots of drink, and you're always 'a dry." The perpetual state of perspiration in which one lives in the colony creates a perpetual thirst, and I know no place where drinking is carried out on more scientific principles. The drink, sui generis, of the country is the swizzle. This subtle and delicious compound is sometimes ignominiously confounded with the cocktail, but though related, they are not identical. The cocktail is a stronger, shorter, and less sophisticated drink than the swizzle; there is no disguise about it; you know you are drinking something hot and strong, thinly disguised by the ice which cools without quenching its potency. But in the swizzle the potency is so skilfullyveiled that the unsuspecting imbiber never discovers he is taking anything stronger than milk, until he finds that his head is going round, and that the road seems to be rising up and trying to slap him in the face. The ingredients of a swizzle are simple enough; a small glass of hollands, ditto of water, half a teaspoonful of Augostura bitters, a small quantity of syrup or powdered white sugar, with crushed ice ad libitum; this concoction is whipped up by a swizzle-stick twirled rapidly between the palms of...