duced by the tempting array of vegetables usually APPENDIX. 1[3 and with the most moderate degree of circumspection, the digestion also does not always keep pace with the the advantages of the cause both to humanity and po- In ascending from the Coimbatoor side, the range is few nights in which it does not descend below 48" or 45". or exposure ; exertion of either body or mind being blessings of a temperate climate. ditional exercise, particularly if the new-comer is se- licy that would result from the location on the Hills of " It is is not unusual also for persons on their first ar- " A most important conclusion appears naturally to European regiments newly arrived in India, whose placed before him. on the contrary, that feeling of exhilaration and sere- nity which is so justly considered as one of the choicest rival, to complain of slight headaches and sleeplessness, months perfectly equal to almost any degree of fatigue arise from the consideration of these facts, namely, a healthy European becomes in the course of one or two "These trifling inconveniences however soon disappear, haustion so universal in the low country, but producing probably greater. increase of appetite produced by the sharp air and ad- resulting probably from the same internal congestion ; attended with none of that depressing languor and ex-