[989]. Life of Clarke, ii. 203–4 n.
[990]. Earl of Carlisle, the poet. See Engl. Bards and Scotch Reviewers.
[991]. Otter, l. c. p. xxvi. Cf. Essay, 1st ed., pp. 210–12. Gentl. Mag., April 1804, p. 374. A compliment which Otter pays him (in an obituary in the Athenæum, 10th Jan. 1835), that his servants stayed long with him, would fall more naturally to his wife.
[992]. Mr. Sargant (Life of Owen, p. 85) says, on the authority of Mr. Holyoake, that Malthus visited New Lanark in its palmy days. Owen’s work then was after Malthus’ own heart; he was reforming the world by beginning with one individual corner of it. Cf. Essay, III. iii. 282 ft.
[993]. See below, p. 423.
[994]. Memoirs of Horner, i. 436–7; cf. p. 406. Cf. Miss Martineau, Hist. of Peace, Introduction, II. i. 257.
[995]. He was made a member of the French Institute, and, in 1833, one of the five foreign Associates of the Acad. des Sciences Mor. and Pol., and a member of the Royal Academy of Berlin (Otter, l. c. p. xli.). See Chas. Comte, Notice, and Garnier, Dict. de l’Éc. Pol.
[996]. Bain, Life of James Mill (1882), p. 199.
[997]. All that is certainly known of the bulk of his contributions to the Edin. Review is that, like those of James Mill and Mackintosh, they do not occur before the twentieth number of it (in July 1807). See Bain, Life of James Mill, p. 75 n. Horner mentions (Memoirs, Vol. I. p. 437) the article on Newenham’s Population of Ireland, 1808, and another (of which he had seen the MS.) Feb. 1811 (Vol. II. p. 68). But see above, p. 285, note.
[998]. The apocryphal story of his eleven daughters is given and exposed by Garnier, Dict. de l’Éc. Pol., art. ‘Malthus.’