[{142}] In transcribing this passage I have taken the liberty so far to correct it as to spell her name properly with an ‘e.’
[{145}] Incidentally she had received high praise in Lord Macaulay’s Review of Madame D’Arblay’s Works in the ‘Edinburgh.’
[{146}] Life of Sir J. Mackintosh, vol. ii. p. 472.
[{149}] Lockhart’s Life of Scott, vol. vi. chap. vii.
[{159}] The Fowles, of Kintbury, in Berkshire.
[{161a}] It seems that her young correspondent, after dating from his home, had been so superfluous as to state in his letter that he was returned home, and thus to have drawn on himself this banter.
[{161b}] The road by which many Winchester boys returned home ran close to Chawton Cottage.
[{161c}] There was, though it exists no longer, a pond close to Chawton Cottage, at the junction of the Winchester and Gosport roads.
[{162}] Mr. Digweed, who conveyed the letters to and from Chawton, was the gentleman named in page[22], as renting the old manor-house and the large farm at Steventon.
[{167}] This cancelled chapter is now printed, in compliance with the requests addressed to me from several quarters.