[859]. II. ii. 127, and cf. above.
[860]. II. xi. 287, &c., &c.
[861]. III. iii. 327 seq.
[862]. Coups d’état in nature. Paul Bert, L’Enseignement Primaire, 1880, p. xxviii.
[863]. Edinburgh Review, July 1821. Cf. Letter to the Rev. T. R. Malthus by David Booth (1823), who absurdly assumes Malthus to be the reviewer. Though internal evidence dispels this fancy, it shows that Malthus was still believed to write for the Edinburgh Review.
[864]. Others, in Table Talk and Biogr. Literaria, are chiefly declamation.
[865]. In these quotations the capitals are in the original, and the italics correspond to underlinings.
[866]. Arthur Aikin’s Annual Review, vol. ii. (for 1803) pp. 292 seq. Cf. Southey’s Life and Correspondence (ed. 1850), vol. ii. p. 251, 20th Jan. 1804: “Yesterday Malthus received, I trust, a mortal wound from my hand;” cf. vol. vi. p. 399, and vol. ii. p. 294. There is no hint of obligation to Coleridge.
[867]. Cf. above, ch. iii. pp. 81 seq., and Bk. III.
[868]. Sic, though it explains a thing by itself.