[138] Apology for Smectymnuus: Prose Works, Vol. I. p. 220.
[139] Diary: Lockhart's Life of Scott, Chap. VII. Vol. VI. p. 227.
[140] Dr. Martin Luther's Divine Discourses at his Table, etc., translated out of the High Germane into the English Tongue by Capt. Henrie Bell, London, 1652: Chap. XXXVII., Of Tribulation and Temptation, p. 397.
[141] At the date of this Lecture the Abolitionist was constantly taunted, especially by business men, as "the man of one idea."
[142] The reporter, Octavius Pickering, was so named from his being the eighth child.
[143] Pro Archia, c. 6.
[144] Williamson, History of Maine, Vol. II. p. 663.
[145] "Observations upon the Greek Accent" is the title of an essay in the Royal Irish Transactions, Vol. VII., by Dr. Browne, suggested, like Mr. Pickering's, by conversation with some modern Greeks, and touching upon similar topics. Dr. Browne is the author of the learned and somewhat antediluvian book on the Civil and Admiralty Law.
[146] Preface to Pickering's Lexicon.
[147] Vol. LXXV. p. 299.