Mrs. Leicester’s School. Ten narratives, seven by Mary, three by Charles, Lamb (1807).

The next three volumes of the Tales of My Landlord. The Heart of Midlothian (second series of the Tales) was published in 1818, and the third series, consisting of The Bride of Lammermoor and A Legend of Montrose, in 1819.

[147]. Mrs. Barbauld. Anna Letitia Barbauld (1743–1825), daughter of the Rev. John Aitken, D.D., joint-author, with her brother John Aitken, of Evenings at Home.

Mrs. Hannah More (1745–1833). Her verses and sacred dramas were published in the first half of her life: she gradually retired from London society, and this may have led to Hazlitt’s doubtful remark as to her being still in life.

[147]. Miss Baillie. Joanna Baillie (1762–1851). Count Basil is one of her Plays of the Passions (1798–1802), and is concerned with the ‘passion’ of love. De Montfort was acted at Drury Lane in 1800 by Mrs. Siddons and Kemble.

Remorse, Bertram, and lastly Fazio. Coleridge’s Remorse (1813), for twenty nights at Drury Lane. C. R. Maturin’s Bertram (1816), successful at Drury lane. Dean Milman’s Fazio (1815), acted at Bath and then at Covent Garden.

A man of no mark. 1 King Henry IV., III. 2.

Make mouths [in them]. Hamlet, IV. 3.

Mr. Rogers’s Pleasures of Memory. Published in 1792.

The Election. Genest says it was performed for the third time on June 10, 1817.