[1127]. P. 312.
[1128]. Præl. Ac., p. 281.
[1129]. It occupies seven Prælections (xvii.-xxiii.) and some 200 pages.
[1130]. ii. 415.
[1131]. ii. 586.
[1132]. ii. 641. He has a liking for Horace; but objects to him (not quite unreasonably) as sordidior quidem in his Epicureanism, when you compare him with Lucretius.
[1133]. He allows him, as well as Byron and Shelley, the plea of vix compos in certain respects.
[1134]. ii. 678 sq. and elsewhere.
[1135]. I pass, as needless to dwell on at length, the excellence of his style and expression in these lectures. “So acute in remark, so beautiful in language,” as Newman says in the letter printed in Occ. Pap., p. xii. sq.
[1136]. My only possession is De Re Critica Prælectiones. Oxford, 1847.