| Atticus | Richard Heber, Esq. | ||||
| Aurelius | George Chalmers, Esq. | ||||
| Alphonso | Horne Tooke? | ||||
| Archimedes | John Rennie, Esq. | ||||
| Bernardo | Joseph Haslewood, Esq. | ||||
| Boscardo | James Boswell, Esq.? | ||||
| Coriolanus | John Ph. Kemble, Esq. | ||||
| Crassus | Watson Taylor, Esq. | ||||
| Eumenius | J. D. Phelps, Esq. | ||||
| (1.) | Gonzalo | John Dent, Esq. | |||
| Hortensius | W. Bolland, Esq. | ||||
| Honorio | George Hibbert, Esq. | ||||
| Hippolyto | Samuel Weller Singer, Esq. | ||||
| Leontes | James Bindley, Esq. | ||||
| Lepidus | Dr. Gosset. | ||||
| Lysander | Rev. T. F. Dibdin. | ||||
| Lorenzo | Sir Mark Sykes. | ||||
| Lavinia's Husband | J. Harrison, Esq. | ||||
| Lisardo | R. Heathcote, Esq. | ||||
| Licius | Francis Freeling, Esq. | ||||
| Marcellus | Edmond Malone, Esq. | ||||
| Mustapha | W. Gardiner of Pall Mall. | ||||
| Menander | Tom. Warton. | ||||
| Malvolio | Payne Knight or Townley? | ||||
| Menalcas | Rev. Henry Drury. | ||||
| Mercurii (III.) | Mr. Henry Foss, Mr. Triphook, and Mr. Griffiths. | ||||
| Meliadus | R. Lang, Esq. | ||||
| Nicas | G. Shepherd, Esq. | ||||
| Narcottus | Rev. J. Jones. | ||||
| Orlando | Michael Woodhull, Esq. | ||||
| Prospero | Francis Douce, Esq. | ||||
| Philemon | J. Barwise, Esq. | ||||
| (2.) | Phormio | Rev. H. Vernon. | |||
| Portius | Mr. John Cuthill. | ||||
| Palmeria | Robert Southey, Esq. | ||||
| Philelphus | Geo. Henry Freeling, Esq. | ||||
| Palermo | John North, Esq. | ||||
| Pontevallo | Duke of Bridgewater? | ||||
| Quisquilius | George Baker, Esq. | ||||
| Rinaldo | J. Edwards, Esq. | ||||
| Rosicrusius | Rev. T. F. Dibdin. | ||||
| Sir Tristram | Walter Scott, Esq. | ||||
| Sycorax | Joseph Ritson. | ||||
| Ulpian | Edw. Vernon Utterson, Esq. | ||||
| (1.) | Attributed to |
| |||
| (2.) | —— | ||||
| Page 164. | |||||
| Right-hand neighbor | Mr. George Nicol. | ||||
| Left-hand ditto | Mr. R. H. Evans. | ||||
| Opposite ditto | Mr. Thomas Payne. | ||||
| Page 249. | |||||
| Literary friend | Sir Henry Ellis. | ||||
W. P.
PARALLEL PASSAGES.[[1]]
1. "In a drear-nighted December,
Too happy, happy tree,
Thy Branches ne'er remember
Their green felicity," &c.—Keats.
"What would be the heart of an old weather-beaten hollow stump, if the leaves and blossoms of its youth were suddenly to spring up out of the mould around it, and to remind it how bright and blissful summer was in the years of its prime?"—Hare's Guesses at Truth, 1st series, p. 244.
2. "Spake full well, in language quaint and olden,
