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<header>
<title>The Spectator</title>
  <number>no. 173</number>
  <date>1711-09-18</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>-----------------Remove fera monstra, tu&#230;que</quotation>
  <quotation>Saxificos vultus, quaecunque ea, tolle Medus&#230;.--Ovid. Met.</quotation>
  <translation>Ovid, Met. v. 215.</translation>
  <translation>Hence with those monstrous features, and O! spare</translation>
  <translation>That Gorgon's look and petrifying stare. --P</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>IN a late Paper I mention'd the Project of an Ingenious Author for the erecting of
several Handicraft Prizes to be contended for by our <italic>British</italic>
Artizans, and the Influence they might have towards the Improvement
of our several Manufactures. I have since that been very much
surprized by the following Advertisement which I. find in the
<italic>Post-Boy</italic> of the 11th Instant, and again repeated in the <italic>Post-Boy</italic> of
the 15th.</paragraph>
<paragraph>On the 9th of October next will be run for upon
Coleshill-Heath in Warwickshire, a Plate of 6 Guineas Value, 3
Heats, by any Horse, Mare or Gelding that hath not won above the
Value of &#163;5, the winning Horse to be sold for &#163;10, to
carry 10 Stone Weight, if 14 Hands high; if above or under to carry
or be allowed Weight for Inches, and to be entered Friday the 5th
at the Swan in Coleshill, before Six in the Evening. Also a Plate
of less Value to be run for by Asses. The same Day a Gold Ring to
be Grinn'd for by Men.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The first of these Diversions, that is to be
exhibited by the &#163;10 Race-Horses, may probably have its Use;
but the two last, in which the Asses and Men are concerned, seem to
me altogether extraordinary and unaccountable. Why they should keep
Running Asses at <italic>Coleshill,</italic> or how making Mouths turns to account
in <italic>Warwickshire,</italic> more than in any other Parts of <italic>England,</italic> I cannot
comprehend. I have looked over all the Olympic Games, and do not
find any thing in them like an Ass-Race, or a Match at Grinning.
However it be, I am informed that several Asses are now kept in
Body-Cloaths, and sweated every Morning upon the Heath, and that
all the Country-Fellows within ten Miles of the <italic>Swan,</italic> grinn an Hour
or two in their Glasses every Morning, in order to quality
themselves for the 9th of <italic>October.</italic> The Prize, which is proposed to
be Grinn'd for, has raised such an Ambition among the Common People
of Out-grinning one another, that many very discerning Persons are
afraid it should spoil most of the Faces in the Country; and that a
<italic>Warwickshire</italic> Man will be known by his Grinn, as Roman-Catholicks
imagine a <italic>Kentish</italic> Man is by his Tail. The Gold Ring which is made
the Prize of Deformity, is just the Reverse of the Golden Apple
that was formerly made the Prize of Beauty, and should carry for
its Posy the old Motto inverted.</paragraph>
<quotation><italic>Detur tetriori.</italic></quotation>
<paragraph>Or to accommodate it to the Capacity of the Combatants,</paragraph>
<quotation><italic>The frightfull'st Grinner</italic></quotation>
<quotation><italic>Be the Winner.</italic></quotation>
<paragraph>In the mean while I would advise a Dutch Painter to be
present at this great Controversy of Faces, in order to make a
Collection of the most remarkable Grinns that shall be there
exhibited.</paragraph>
<paragraph>I must not here omit an Account which I lately received
of one of these Grinning-Matches from a Gentleman, who, upon
reading the above-mentioned Advertisement, entertained a
Coffee-house with the following Narrative. Upon the taking of
<italic>Namur,</italic><footnote name="(1)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote173.xml"></footnote> amidst other publick Rejoicings made on that Occasion,
there was a Gold Ring given by a Whig Justice of Peace to be
grinn'd for. The first Competitor that entered the Lists, was a
black swarthy <italic>French Man,</italic> who accidentally passed that way, and
being a Man naturally of a wither'd Look, and hard Features,
promised himself good Success. He was placed upon a Table in the
great Point of View, and looking upon the Company like <italic>Milton's</italic>
Death,</paragraph>
<quotation><italic>Grinn'd [horribly</italic><footnote name="(2)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote173.xml"></footnote>] 
<italic>a Ghastly Smile---</italic></quotation>
<paragraph>His Muscles were so drawn together on each side of his Face, that he shew'd twenty
Teeth at a Grinn, and put the County in some pain, lest a Foreigner
should carry away the Honour of the Day; but upon a farther Tryal
they found he was Master only of the merry Grinn.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The next that mounted the Table was a Malecontent in those Days, and a great
Master in the whole Art of Grinning, but particularly excelled in
the angry Grinn. He did his Part so well, that he is said to have
made half a dozen Women miscarry; but the Justice being apprised by
one who stood near him, that the Fellow who Grinned in his Face was
a <italic>Jacobite,</italic> and being unwilling that a Disaffected Person should
win the Gold Ring, and be looked upon as the best Grinner in the
Country, he ordered the Oaths to be tendered unto him upon his
quitting the Table, which the Grinner refusing, he was set aside as
an unqualified Person. There were several other Grotesque Figures
that presented themselves which would be too tedious to describe. I
must not however omit a Ploughman, who lived the farther Part of
the Country, and being very lucky in a Pair of long Lanthorn-Jaws,
wrung his face into such a hideous Grimace that every Feature of it
appeared under a different Distortion. The whole Company stood
astonished at such a complicated Grinn, and were ready to assign
the Prize to him, had it not been proved by one of his Antagonists,
that he had practised with Verjuice for some Days before, and had a
Crab found upon him at the very time of Grinning; upon which the
best Judges of Grinning declared it as their Opinion, that he was
not to be looked upon as a fair Grinner, and therefore ordered him
to be set aside as a Cheat.</paragraph>
<paragraph>The Prize, it. seems, fell at length
upon a Cobler, <italic>Giles Gorgon</italic> by Name, who produced several new
Grinns of his own Invention, having been used to cut Faces for many
Years together over his Last. At the very first Grinn he cast every
Human Feature out of his Countenance; at the second he became the
Face of a Spout; at the third a Baboon, at the fourth the Head of'
a Base-Viol, and at the fifth a Pair of Nut-Crackers. The whole
Assembly wondered at his Accomplishments, and bestowed the Ring on
him unanimously; but, what he esteemed more than all the rest, a
Country Wench, whom he had wooed in vain for above five Years
before, was so charmed with his Grinns, and the Applauses which he
received on all Sides, that she Married him the Week following, and
to this Day wears the Prize upon her Finger, the Cobler having made
use of it as his Wedding-Ring.</paragraph>
<paragraph>This Paper might. perhaps seem very
impertinent, if it grew serious in the Conclusion. I would
nevertheless leave it to the Consideration of those who are the
Patrons of this monstrous Tryal of Skill, whether or no they are
not guilty, in some measure, of an Affront to their Species, in
treating after this manner the <italic>Human Face Divine,</italic> and turning that
Part of us, which has so great an Image impressed upon it, into the
Image of a Monkey; whether the raising such silly Competitions
among the Ignorant, proposing Prizes for such useless
Accomplishments, filling the common People's Heads with such
Senseless Ambitions, and inspiring them with such absurd Ideas of
Superiority and Preheminence, has not in it something Immoral as
well as Ridiculous.<footnote name="(3)" url="../september_footnotes/footnote173.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>L.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. Sept. 1, 1695.</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. [<italic>horribly</italic>]. Neither is quite right. 'Death 'Grinn'd horrible a ghastly smile.'--P. L., Bk. II. 1.864.</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. Two volumes of Original Letters sent to the Tatler
and Spectator and not inserted, were published by Charles Lillie in
1725. In Vol. II (pp. 72,73), is a letter from Coleshill, informing
the Spectator that in deference to his opinion, and chiefly through
the mediation of some neighboring ladies, the Grinning Match had
been abandoned, and requesting his advice as to the disposal of the
Grinning Prize.</paragraph>
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