[6] The printing is, however, always bad.

[7] So far as I know, the original of that system of abomination.

[8] My own copy, apparently a first edition, is dated 1836.

[9] Charles Whittingham, the founder of the Chiswick Press, who died in 1840, has the credit of being the first printer in England to use overlays, and as an early example might be mentioned, "The Gardens and Menageries of the Zoological Society delineated," published by Tilt in 1830, containing drawings by William Harvey, engraved by Branston and Wright, assisted by other artists.

[10] Rather English and French, Andrew, Best, Leloir.

[11] I am mistaken in this, as many of Pinwell and North's drawings, made on paper in 1865-66 for Dalziel, were photographed on wood.

[12] First edition 1889.

[13] There are two or three seventeenth-century drawings on the wood at South Kensington, and some, I believe, in the British Museum.

[14] On paper.

[15] At least, he was the first man to do important artistic wood-engraving.