NOTES.
[63] This was originally marked IX.
[67a] Scored out in Dickens’s MS.
[67b] Scored out in Dickens’s MS.
[67c] Scored out in Dickens’s MS.
[67d] Scored out in Dickens’s MS.
[90] Charles Dickens as Editor, p. 386.
[91] Letters of Charles Dickens to Wilkie Collins, p. 123.
[92a] Studies in Prose and Poetry.
[92b] Letters of Charles Dickens to Wilkie Collins, p. 103.
[104] It was known to that thorough scholar, Mr. Swinburne. See Studies in Prose and Poetry, p. 114.
[113] Blackwood, May 1911, p. 672.
[119] Morning Leader, 15th July 1905.
[122] Cambridge Review, 9th March 1911.
[127] 1st June 1906.
[130] 24th February 1911.
[139] The Puzzle of Dickens’s Last Plot, p. 10.
[163] Recollections and Impressions, by E. M. Sellar, p. 64.
[164a] Journal of Sir Walter Scott, vol. ii. p. 422.
[164b] Cambridge Review, 9th March 1911.
[184] Sir Walter Scott’s Journal, vol. ii. p. 131.
[185] Sir Walter Scott’s Journal, vol. ii. p. 236.
[196] The following may be quoted from Pickwick:
‘“Dismal Jenny?” inquired Jingle.
‘“Yes.”
‘Jingle shook his head.
‘“Clever rascal—queer fellow, hoaxing genius—Job’s brother.”
‘“Job’s brother!” exclaimed Mr. Pickwick. “Well, now I look at him closely, there is a likeness.”’
[200] Chapter xiii.