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BYRON AND WORDSWORTH
Now republished for the first time. See Mr. W. C. Hazlitt’s
Memoirs, etc. I. xxix.

PAG
E Lord Byron’s haste, etc. See Leigh Hunt’s Lord Byron and his
328. Contemporaries, I. 77.
‘A cure,’ etc. Cf. Reflections on the Revolution in France
(Select Works, ed. Payne, II. 164).
329. ‘Ah! voila,’ etc. Confessions, Part I. Liv. VI.
‘Slow,’ etc. Cf. As You Like It, Act II. Sc. 7.
Note. Ada Reis; a Tale, by Lady Caroline Lamb (1785–1828),
published in 1823.
ON CANT AND HYPOCRISY
This essay and the next were published with some omissions in
Sketches and Essays.

PAG
E ‘If to do,’ etc. The Merchant of Venice, Act I. Sc. 2.
330. Curl. Edmund Curll (1675–1747).

‘The spirit,’ etc. S. Matthew xxvi. 41.


‘Most easily,’ etc. Cf. Hebrews xii. 1.
331. Video, etc. Ovid, Metam., VII. 20–1.

‘Duenna.’ See Act III. Sc. 5.


332. ‘A little round,’ etc. The Castle of Indolence, I. St. 69.

Lord Shaftesbury. See Characteristicks, An Inquiry


333. concerning Virtue, or Merit, Part I. Sect. II.
‘Upon this bank,’ etc. Macbeth, Act I. Sc. 7.
335. ‘Mighty coil,’ etc. Cf. King Lear, Act III. Sc. 2.
THE SAME SUBJECT CONTINUED

337. ‘Eremites,’ etc. Paradise Lost, III. 474–5.


338. ‘Cant religious,’ etc. See Byron’s Letter to Murray on Bowles’s
Strictures on the Life and Writings of Pope. Letters, etc.,
ed. Prothero, v. 536.
339. Mr. Coleridge, etc. Nearly the whole of this passage from this
point to the end was omitted in Sketches and Essays. In the
Magazine the essay concludes with the words ‘Cetera
desunt.’
Mr. Liberal Snake. See Disraeli’s Vivian Grey.
POETRY
Now republished for the first time. Some of the essays now first
republished from The Atlas are identified as Hazlitt’s in Mr. W. C.
Hazlitt’s Memoirs, etc. (see I. xxix. and xxx.). The others have been
included on the strength of the internal evidence of authorship. A
short paper, attributed to Hazlitt by Mr. W. C. Hazlitt (Memoirs, I.
xxix.), and entitled ‘Richesse de la Langue,’ had appeared in The
Atlas for Jan. 25, 1829. It runs as follows:—
‘How should one convey by a single word an expression of
face which having arisen from some strong passion, uneasiness
or emotion, is converted into an habitual character, and
remains without any immediate object to excite it? In the
English language there are above thirty ways of doing this, or
else approaching to, and hovering round the point. As for
instance, we may express this look by the following epithets,
more or less pointedly, and with various inflections of meaning
attached to them:—wild, scared, startled, haggard, harassed,
hunted, nervous, agitated, apprehensive, terrified, dismayed,
abstracted, stunned, panick-struck, odd, strange, wayward,
flighty, uncouth, unaccountable, eccentric, embarrassed,
unsettled, uneasy, overconscious, morbid, careworn, blighted,
scare-crow, hang-dog, ghastly, wilful, dogged, staring, fierce,
etc. All these come tolerably near the mark, and differ from
each other; yet none of them is the very word that is wanted to
express the thing in question, though we have no doubt there is
such a word in the English language, and that it might be
suggested by some one who has a greater command of its
resources. The above remarks may serve to guard the student
of English, whether a foreigner or merely a stranger to his
native tongue, against unmeaning synonymes or monotonous
common-place.’

PAG
E ‘Daffodils,’ etc. A Winter’s Tale, Act IV. Sc. 4.
339. ‘That fine madness,’ etc. Cf. Drayton, Elegy, To Henry
340. Reynolds, Esq.

341. ‘Cowslips wan,’ etc. Lycidas, 147.


Lowly children, etc. Cf. ‘With all the lowly children of the
shade.’ Thomson, The Seasons, Spring, 450.
342. ‘To elevate and surprise.’ The Duke of Buckingham, The
Rehearsal, Act I. Sc. 1.
ENGLISH GRAMMAR
Now republished for the first time. Cf. vol. IV. pp. 231 et seq. and
389 et seq.

‘Foregone conclusion.’ Othello, Act III. Sc. 3.


343. ‘A man of Ind.’ Cf. The Tempest, Act II. Sc. 2.
‘Wise,’ etc. Cf. 1 Corinthians iv. 6.
344. A standard book. Lindley Murray’s English Grammar, no
doubt, the later editions of which were published by
Longmans.
345. Mr. Fearn. Hazlitt’s friend. Anti-Tooke was published in
1824. Cf. vol. VI. (Table-Talk), 63–4.
‘Still, small.’ 1 Kings xix. 12.
MEMORABILIA OF MR. COLERIDGE
Now republished for the first time. Many of the opinions expressed
are referred to by Hazlitt elsewhere.

PAG
E Barrow. Cf. ante, p. 266, where Hume is said to have
346. borrowed from South.
347. ‘More was meant,’ etc. Cf. Il Penseroso, 120.
348. Dr. Dodd. William Dodd (1729–1777), executed for forgery in
1777. His Thoughts in Prison appeared in the same year.
PETER PINDAR
Now republished for the first time.

‘Men,’ etc. 2 Henry IV., Act III. Sc. 2.


‘A manly man,’ etc. Chaucer, The Canterbury Tales,
Prologue, 167.
349. ‘Haloo,’ etc. Cf. 2 Henry IV., Act I. Sc. 2.
Viotti. Giovanni Battista Viotti (1753–1824).
‘Making the worse,’ etc. Paradise Lost, II. 113–14.
LOGIC
Now republished for the first time.

PAG
E ‘That which is,’ etc. Cf. Twelfth Night, Act IV. Sc. 2. The
351. mistake of ‘Cophetua’ for ‘Gorboduc’ is made elsewhere by
Hazlitt.
332. ‘Over shoes, over boots.’ Cf. The Two Gentlemen of Verona,
Act I. Sc. 1.
THE LATE MR. CURRAN
Now republished for the first time.

353. The late shots at Edinburgh. Hazlitt may refer to the


conviction and execution (Jan. 28, 1829) of the notorious
William Burke. His partner Hare had given evidence
against him and had been released.
THE COURT JOURNAL—A DIALOGUE
Now republished for the first time. The Court Journal was a
weekly paper founded by Henry Colburn, May 2, 1829.

PAG
E ‘Our withers,’ etc. Hamlet, Act III. Sc. 2.
355.
‘Married a highwayman,’ etc. The Beggar’s Opera, I. 1.
‘The story of Miss ——,’ etc. Cf. vol. XI. (Fugitive Writings), p.
383 note.
356. Mr. C——. Henry Colburn presumably.
THE LATE DR. PRIESTLEY
Now republished for the first time.

357. ‘His body thought.’ Cf. Donne, An Anatomy of the World, The
Second Anniversary, 245–6.
358. Controversy with Dr. Price. Published in 1778.
‘Dazzling,’ etc. Cf. Comus, 791.
359. ‘Anthropagi,’ etc. Cf. Othello, Act I. Sc. 3.
‘Nay, an you mouth,’ etc. Cf. Hamlet, Act V. Sc. 1.
‘None but a Cobbett,’ etc. See Cobbett’s Observations on
Priestley’s Emigration (Selections, etc. I. 15, et seq.).
SECTS AND PARTIES
Now republished for the first time.

361. A board of Utility at Charing Cross. Hazlitt may have had in


his mind Francis Place, the radical tailor of Charing Cross,
whose house was well known as a Radical meeting-place,
but the essay attacks the Utilitarian party at large.
362. Mrs. Chatterley. The wife of the actor William Simmonds
Chatterley. It is difficult to understand what Hazlitt’s
innuendo is. The journal he refers to is presumably the
Morning Chronicle.
363. ‘What they are least assured.’ Cf. Measure for Measure, Act
II. Sc. 2,
CONVERSATIONS AS GOOD AS REAL (1)
These two papers, now republished for the first time, were omitted
for some reason by Hazlitt when he brought out Mr. Northcote’s
Conversations. See vol. VI. note to p. 420. T. is Hazlitt, J., Northcote.
This first Conversation would have followed after Conversation the
Twentieth. See for Hogarth, vol. VIII. (English Comic Writers) 133 et
seq., and Lamb’s essay ‘On the Genius and Character of Hogarth’
(Works, ed. E. V. Lucas, I. 70).

PAG
E That old Mother W. It is not clear to what figure Northcote
364. refers. The procuress in The Harlot’s Progress (Plate I.) was
the notorious Mother Needham who died in 1731.
Fielding has tried, etc. Tom Jones, Book IV. chap. ii.
That remark of his. Cf. ante, p. 268, and vol. VIII. p. 442.
‘With her pie-dish,’ etc. Hazlitt’s phrase. See vol. VIII. p. 137.
367. The ‘Possessed Boy.’ A fresco in the chapel of San Nilo, Grotta
Ferrata. The drawing from this fresco was presumably by
John Bryant Lane (1788–1868), who spent ten years in
Rome (1817–1827).
The late Edinburgh murders. See ante, p. 353 and note.
The group at Ambrose’s. See Wilson’s Noctes Ambrosianæ.
368. One of his tales. Crabbe’s tale ‘The Confidant,’ upon which
Lamb founded The Wife’s Trial; or, the Intruding Widow,
published in Blackwood, 1828.
Tam O’Shanter. Statues of Tam O’Shanter and Souter
Johnny, by Thoms, were exhibited in London in 1829.
Ducrow. Andrew Ducrow (1793–1842), the equestrian
performer.
CONVERSATIONS AS GOOD AS REAL (2)

369. G. Godwin, probably.


370. A classical education. Cf. vol. I. (The Round Table), p. 5 and
note.
TRIFLES LIGHT AS AIR
Republished by Mr. W. C. Hazlitt in his edition of The Round
Table (Bohn, 1871). Nos. I.–X. appeared in The Atlas on Sept. 27,
1829; Nos. XI.–XVII. on Oct. 4, 1829. The following additional ‘Trifle’
(XVIII.) appeared in Bohn’s Library, though not in the Magazine: ‘The
French Revolutionists in the “Reign of Terror,” with Robespierre at
their head, made one grand mistake. They really thought that by
getting rid of the patrons and abettors of the ancient régime they
should put an end to the breed of tyrants and slaves; whereas in
order to do this it would be necessary to put an end to the whole
human race.’

PAG
E It was merely a fashion, etc. See Byron’s letter to Murray on
372. Bowles and Pope (Letters, etc., ed. Prothero, V. 553 and
note).
‘Procrastination,’ etc. Young, Night Thoughts, I. 393.
375. ‘Ears polite.’ Pope, Moral Essays, IV. 150.
‘Inconstant moon.’ Romeo and Juliet, II. 2.
COMMON SENSE
Now republished for the first time.

PAG
E
‘Its price,’ etc. Cf. Job xxviii. 18.
377. ‘Fairly worth the seven.’ Pope, Moral Essays, IV. 44.

‘Comes home,’ etc. Bacon, Essays, Dedication.


‘Fear,’ etc. Cowper, The Task, II. 325.
378. Commodore Trunnion, etc. See Peregrine Pickle, Chap. viii.

‘They have,’ etc. Cf. Julius Cæsar, Act II. Sc. 1.


379.
‘Crack,’ etc. ‘The father cracks of horses, pleughs, and kye.’
380. Burns, Cotter’s Saturday Night, St. VIII.
Phlegmatic C——. Hazlitt probably refers to Cobbett. Cf. a
passage in Table-Talk (vol. VI. p. 102).
THE SPIRIT OF CONTROVERSY
Now republished for the first time.

381. ‘Envy,’ etc. Cf. ‘From envy, hatred, and malice, and all
uncharitableness.’ The Litany.
383. ‘Root of the matter.’ Job xix. 28.
‘Their hearts,’ etc. Cf. S. Luke xxiv. 32.
‘A coil and pudder.’ See ante, notes to pp. 309 and 335.
Mr. Taylor’s discourses. Robert Taylor (1784–1844), the
notorious deistical clergyman, who, early in 1828, had been
sentenced to a year’s imprisonment for a blasphemous
discourse.
The Duke of Newcastle. The fourth Duke (1785–1851), a
violent opponent of Catholic Emancipation passed by
Wellington’s ministry in 1829.
‘Strange,’ etc. Byrom, On the Feuds between Handel and
Bononcini.
384. ‘Like a thick scarf,’ etc. See ante, note to p. 82.
‘Whose edge,’ etc. Cymbeline, Act III. Sc. 4.
‘Of whatsoe’er descent,’ etc. Dryden, Absalom and
Achitophel, I. 100–3.
ENVY
Republished in Sketches and Essays.

387. ‘Jealous leer malign.’ Paradise Lost, IV. 503.


388. ‘Phœnix,’ etc. Ibid. v. 272.
‘Though wondering senates,’ etc. Pope, Moral Essays, I. 184–
7.
390. ‘Like to a gate,’ etc. Cf. Troilus and Cressida, Act III. Sc. 3.
391. ‘The learned pate,’ etc. Timon of Athens, Act IV. Sc. 3.

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