[Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character by Edward Bannerman Ramsay]@TWC D-Link bookReminiscences of Scottish Life and Character CHAPTER THE THIRD 34/34
To drink "fair," used to imply that the person drank in the same proportion as the company; to drink more would be unmannerly; to drink less might imply some unfair motive.
Either interpretation shows the importance attached to drinking and all that concerned it. [32] In Burt's _Letters from the North of Scotland_, written about 1730, similar scenes are related as occurring in Culloden House: as the company were disabled by drink, two servants in waiting took up the invalids with short poles in their chairs as they sat (if not fallen down), and carried them off to their beds. [33] Lord Cockburn's _Memorials of his Time_, p.
37, _et seq_. [34] May we never be cast down by adversity, or unduly elevated by prosperity. [35] A toast at parting or breaking up of the party. [36] Loving [37] Plenty [38] Toast for agricultural dinners [39] Ghastly. [40] The scene is described and place mentioned in Dr.Strang's account of Glasgow Clubs, p.
104, 2d edit. [41] Swept..
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