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PERSIA.
From SIR JOHN CHARDIN, who was there in the last Century; ELTON, who travelled through the Northern Provinces, in 1739; JONAS HANWAY, who did the same in 1744; and WILLIAM FRANKLIN, who resided eight months at SHI∣RAUZ, in 1786 and 1787.
CHAP. III. Continued.
THE baths in Persia are very commodious, and well worth the attention of a stranger. They consist gene∣rally of two large apartments, one of which furnishes a place for undressing, the other is the bath. On the side of the first are stone benches, raised two feet from the ground, covered with mats and carpets, where the bathers sit to undress, and thence they proceed to the bath, through a long, narrow passage. The bath is a large room, of an octagon form, with a cupola at top, through which the light and air are admitted. On the sides of this room