I care not for his grandsire or his dam.[dam.]”
A mild echo of the revolutionary period!
[1109]. In a review in the British Critic (1814), reprinted in Papers and Reviews, Oxford and London, 1877.
[1110]. See the Remains, edited by his son. London, 1871.
[1111]. First published at the end of his tenure in 1813. My copy is the 2nd ed., Oxford, 1828.
[1112]. See remarks on Trapp, pp. 6 and 7 ed. cit.
[1113]. V. pp. 187, 197, 390, 229, 177.
[1114]. Keble, however, was right in specifying the chief exception—the admirable prælection on Epitaphs (No. 27, p. 340).
[1115]. This is all the more tantalising in that his definition of Judicium in Præl. 2 seems to promise nothing less than an inquiry into the critical and appreciative faculty as regards Poetry.
[1116]. V. vol. i.