[91] Galt: George III, his Court and Family.

[92] According to John Galt, George III wrote several letters signed Ralph Robinson and dated from Windsor, to Arthur Young for the latter's Annals of Agriculture.

[93] The New Foundling Hospital for Wit.

[94] Heroic Epistle to Sir William Chambers.

[95] Heroic Epistle to Sir William Chambers.

[96] "Secluded from the world, attached from his infancy to one set of persons and one set of ideas, he can neither open his heart to new connexions, nor his mind to better information. A character of this sort is the soil fittest to produce that obstinate bigotry in politics and religion which begins with a meritorious sacrifice of the understanding, and finally conducts the monarch and the martyr to the block."—Junius, May 28, 1770.

[97] Russia, The Maiden Queen; Germany, The Rivals; Genoa, All's Well that Ends Well; Spain, The Ambitious Stepmother; Prussia, The Inconstant, or, The Way to Win Him; France, The Busy-Body, Rather the Way of the World; Sweden, She Would if She Could; Denmark, As You Like It; The Dutch, The Medley; or, Nature Will Prevail; Flanders, How Happy Could She Be With Either; King of Sardinia, The Spartan Hero; Stanislaus, An Old Man Taught Wisdom; Don Philip, Much Ado About Nothing; The Young Pretender, A Midsummer Night's Dream.

[98] Recollections and Reflections.

[99] The Four Georges.

[100] Galt: George III, his Court and Family.