Page:The Travels of Dean Mahomet.djvu/172

Rh or agrreablenes; yet, even the knowledge of their being o common, is with many totally forgotten in the ravihing diplay of their natural and acquired charms. They dance to the muic of cymbals, fifes, and drums, they term tum-tums, and often repreent in pantomime uch cenes, as a lover courting his mitres; a procures, endeavouring to educe a woman from one gallant to another; and a girl, timordos and afraid of being caught in an intrigue. All thee love-cenes, they perform, in getures, air, and teps, with well-adapted expreion. In ome of their dances, even in public, modety is not much repected in the motions of their limbs, the ing