[VOL. II. ]
310. ‘Both living and loving.’ Lamb’s version of Thekla’s Song in The Piccolomini. See Coleridge’s Poetical Works, ed. J. D. Campbell, p. 648. 311. ‘Winged wound.’ Dryden, The Hind and the Panther, I. 6. 347. ‘Who had been beguiled,’ etc. Leigh Hunt, The Story of Rimini, Canto III. 363. ‘Throws a cruel sunshine on a fool.’ Armstrong, The Art of Preserving Health, Book IV. 396. The man who bought Punch. See vol. XII. p. 353.
[VOL. III. ]
38. The Room over the way. See Cobbett’s Weekly Political Register, Sept. 1817 (Selections, etc., v. 259). 41. St. Peter is well at Rome. Don Quixote, Part II. Book III. chap, xli., and elsewhere. 45. ‘Lest the courtiers,’ etc. The Beggar’s Opera, II. 2. 60. ‘One note day and night.’ Burke, Regicide Peace (Select Works, ed. Payne, p. 51). 63. ‘Which fear,’ etc. Cowper, The Task, II. 325. 166. ‘In Philharmonia’s undivided dale.’ Cf. ‘O’er peaceful Freedom’s undivided dale.’ Coleridge, Monody on the Death of Chatterton, 140. 171. ‘Unslacked of motion.’ See vol. IV. p. 42 and note. 174. ‘Of whatsoever race,’ etc. Cf. Dryden, Absalom and Achitophel, I. 100–103. 239. ‘Meek mouths ruminant.’ Cf. ‘With ruminant meek mouths.’ Leigh Hunt, The Story of Rimini, Canto II. 243. The Essay on ‘The Effects of War and Taxes,’ appeared also in The New Scots Magazine for Oct. 1818. 259. ‘Soul-killing lies,’ etc. Lamb, John Woodvil, Act II. 268. ‘Certain so wroth,’ etc. Chaucer, Canterbury Tales, The Prologue, 451–2. 273. ‘People of the nicest imaginations,’ etc. Cf. Swift, Thoughts on Various Subjects. 284. ‘Resemble the flies of a summer.’ Cf. ‘Men would become little better than the flies of a summer.’ Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (Select Works, ed. Payne, II. 112). 328. ‘A new creation,’ etc. Goldsmith, The Traveller, 296.
[VOL. IV. ]
17. ‘Sacro,’ etc. Quoted in the notes to Junius. See notes to Letter XXXVI. 24. To elevate and surprise. The Duke of Buckingham’s The Rehearsal, I. 1. 44. ‘Your very nice people,’ etc. See ante, note to vol. III. p. 273. 147. ‘Where he picks clean teeth.’ Cowper, The Task, II. 627. 217. ‘When he saw,’ etc. Coleridge, Remorse, Act IV. Sc. 2. 220. Pingo in eternitatem. A saying attributed to Zeuxis. See Sir Joshua Reynolds’s Discourses, No. III. 311. ‘Sithence no fairy lights,’ etc. See vol. XI. pp. 224, 268, and notes.
[VOL. V. ]
9. ‘And visions,’ etc. See ante, note to vol. I. p. 112. 10. ‘Obscurity,’ etc. See vol. XI. p. 224 and note. 120. ‘And that green wreath,’ etc. Southey, Carmen Nuptiale, Proem, St. 9. 215. ‘A foot,’ etc. Cf. Donne, The Storm, 3–4. 277. Friar Onion. See Boccaccio, The Decameron, Sixth Day, Novel X. 280. ‘That, like a trumpet,’ etc. Cf. Leigh Hunt, The Story of Rimini, Canto III. 345. ‘The last of those fair clouds,’ etc. Cf. Wordsworth, The Excursion, VII. 1014–16. 372. For the note on Lord Dorset read Charles Sackville (1638–1706), sixth Earl of Dorset, author of ‘To all you ladies now on land,’ included with other songs in Hazlitt’s Select British Poets.
[VOL. VI. ]
23. ‘Those suns and skies so pure.’ Warton, Sonnet (IX.) to the River Lodon. 93. ‘The fair variety of things.’ Akenside, Pleasures of the Imagination, I. 78. 94. A neighbouring Baronet. See vol. XII., note to p. 202. 96. ‘Like life and death,’ etc. Cf. Lamb., John Woodvil, Act II. 106. ‘The beautiful is vanished,’ etc. Coleridge, The Death of Wallenstein, v. I. 113. ‘Like a faint shadow,’ etc. Cf. The Faerie Queene, II. vii. 29. 152. Note. ‘The worse, the second fall of man.’ Cf. Windham, Speeches, I. 311 (March 13, 1797). 156. ‘To warn and scare.’ Rev. Sneyd Davies, To the Honourable and Reverend F. C. (Dodsley, Collection of Poems, VI. 138). 189. ‘The vine-covered hills,’ etc. William Roscoe, Lines written in 1788, parodied in The Anti-Jacobin. 211. ‘Free from the Sirian star,’ etc. Beaumont and Fletcher, Philaster, Act v. Sc. 3. 218. ‘It was out of all plumb,’ etc. Tristram Shandy, Book III. chap. xii. 225. ‘Stud of night-mares.’ Cf. ‘I confess an occasional night-mare; but I do not, as in early youth, keep a stud of them.’ Lamb, Essays of Elia (Witches, and other Night-Fears). 243. ‘Tall, opaque words.’ Hazlitt was perhaps quoting from himself. See vol. VIII. p. 257. 259. ‘To angels ’twas most like.’ The Flower and the Leaf, St. 19. 308. ‘Wild wit,’ etc. Gray, Ode, On a Distant Prospect of Eton College. 317. ‘As much again to govern it.’ This line is not Butler’s, but Pope’s. See An Essay on Criticism, 80–81: