[11] The Double Marriage, (1726).
[12] Lodge's Rosalynde, ed. E.C. Baldwin, p. 19. Philidore and Placentia (1727), p. 12.
[13] Miss C.E. Morgan, The Novel of Manners, (1911), 100.
[14] A companion-piece to the third edition of The Mercenary Lover, (1728).
[15] A companion-piece to The Fatal Secret: or, Constancy in Distress.
[16] Monthly Review, XXXVIII, 412, May, 1768. Clementina; or the History of an Italian Lady, who made her Escape from a Monastery, etc.
[17] Critical Review, XXV, 59.
[18] In both editions is advertised "Persecuted Virtue: or, the Cruel Lover. A True Secret History, Writ at the Request of a Lady of Quality," which was advertised also in the Daily Post, 28 Nov. 1728. I have not found a copy.
[19]
An anonymous poem prefixed to Mrs. Elizabeth Boyd's The Happy
Unfortunate; or, the Female Page (1737) testifies to Mrs. Haywood's
reputation in the following terms:
"Yeild [sic] Heywood yeild, yeild all whose tender Strains,
Inspire the Dreams of Maids and lovesick Swains;
Who taint the unripen'd Girl with amorous Fire,
And hint the first faint Dawnings of Desire:
Wing each Love-Atom, that in Embryo lies,
And teach young Parthenissa's Breasts to rise.
A new Elisa writes," etc., etc.