Ditto, ditto. "Vere magnum habere," &c. Whence is this?
Ditto, ditto. "The strange fiction of the ancient poets." In note (a) we find "Stesichorus, Apollodorus, and others" named. Whereabouts?
Ditto, p. 11. (note c). "This fine passage has been quoted by Macaulay." Ut sup., p. 407.
Essay VI. p. 15. "Tacitus saith." Ann., v. 1.
Ditto, ditto. "And again, when Mucianus," &c. Ditto, Hist., ii. 76.
Ditto, ditto. "Which indeed are arts, &c., as Tacitus well calleth them." Where?
Ditto, p. 17. "It is a good shrewd proverb of the Spaniard." What is the proverb?
Essay VII. p. 19. "The precept, 'Optimum elige,' &c." Whence? though I am ashamed to ask.
Essay VIII. p. 20. "The generals." See Æsch. Persæ, 404. (Dindf.), and Blomfield in loc. (v. 411. ed. suæ).
Ditto, ditto. "It was said of Ulysses," &c. By whom? Compare Od., v. 218.