[11a] Lavengro, ch. xiv.
[11b] Ibid., ch. xxiii.
[15] Lavengro, ch. xxxvii.
[20] Lavengro, ch. xxv.
[21] Life of B. R. Haydon, by Tom Taylor, 1853, vol. ii. p. 21.
[22] Benjamin Robert Haydon: Correspondence and Table Talk, with a Memoir by his son, Frederic Wordsworth Haydon, vol. i. pp. 360–1.
[33a] The Bible in Spain, ch. xx.
[33b] Dr. Johnson was the first as Borrow was the second to earn this distinction. Johnson, as reported by Boswell, says:
“I have long wished that the Irish literature were cultivated. Ireland is known by tradition to have been once the seat of piety and learning, and surely it would be very acceptable to all those who are curious on the origin of nations or the affinities of languages to be further informed of the evolution of a people so ancient and once so illustrious. I hope that you will continue to cultivate this kind of learning which has too long been neglected, and which, if it be suffered to remain in oblivion for another century, may perhaps never be retrieved.”
[34] Lavengro.