[494]. P. 75.
[495]. P. 108.
[496]. P. 77.
[497]. P. 139.
[498]. P. 185.
[499]. P. 278. These passages may remind some of the story of one of George Sand’s old lovers pausing before a photograph of her in a shop-window, and saying to his companion, “Et je l’ai connue belle!”
[500]. P. 344.
[501]. The usual dog-metaphors are no triviality in regard to Hazlitt when he is in this mood. Every one who knows dogs must have noticed the way in which they often snarl, as if they could not help it; the growl and gnash are forced from them.
[502]. P. 441.
[503]. P. 449.