[11] A specimen of such scribble, in the shape of a fragment of romance narrative, composed in the sham Old-English of Rowley, and in prose, not verse, will be found in The Philosophy of Mystery, by W. C. Dendy (London, 1841), p. 99, and another, preserved by Mr H. Stephens, in the Poetical Works, ed. Forman (1 vol. 1884), p. 558.

[12] See [Appendix].

[13] See C. L. Feltoe, Memorials of J. F. South (London, 1884), p. 81.

[14] Houghton MSS. See also Dr B. W. Richardson in the Asclepiad, vol. i. p. 134.

[15] Houghton MSS.

[16] What, for instance, can be less Spenserian and at the same time less Byronic than—

“For sure so fair a place was never seen
Of all that ever charm’d romantic eye”?

[17] See Appendix, [p. 222].

[18] See Appendix, [p. 223].

[19] See particularly the Invocation to Sleep in the little volume of Webb’s poems published by the Olliers in 1821.