PAGE 182. Our own Country, There was a tapestry factory at No. 609. Chelsea. Motto. Seneca, Thyestes, 398-403. No. 610, Cowley's Relation. From 'The Country Life (Lib. iv. No. 611. No, 612. l'AGE 192. Motto. Virgil, Georg. iv. 564. No. 613. Visiting-Days. See note, vol. i. p. 324. PAGE 193 What shall I do, etc. Cowley, The Motto (Miscel- The Melancholy Cowley. The Complaint * Verses written on Several Occasions,' ed. 1700, p. 25. No. 614. PAGE 198. Andromache . Mr Philips. See note, vol. v. p. 290. Cowell's Interpreter. The passage is taken from the article on Free-bench'in Cowell's Law Dictionary; or the Interpreter of Words and Terms, used either in the Common or Statute Laws and in Tenures and Jocular Customs. Very much augmented and improved, London, 1708, fol. It does not occur in the early quarto editions. PAGE 199. Motto. Horace, Odes, IV. ix. 47-52. No. 615. PAGE 200. Book of Wisdom, xvii. PAGE 201. Horace. Odes, III. iii. Motto. Martial, Epigr. I. ix. 2. No. 616. Cicero. Perhaps De Officiis, i. 29. 203. Past two a clock, etc. is a formula of the night-watchman. “Two in the Morning is the Word, old Boy” (A). Sir Richard. Is this an allusion to Steele's recent Protestant No. 617. PAGE 205. Marrow-bone and Cleaver. Frequently referred to about this time as the instruments of mob-music. Cf. Tatler, No. 153, and see the sixth plate of Hogarth's Idlc and Industrious Apprentices. The Mobile.. - This word (placed in contrast with 'mob' in the letter on p. 203) was hardly an antiquated form at this time. See vol. ii. p. 193 and, note; also the quotations in Skeat's Etymological Dictionary (art. 'mob'). The Cleveland (i.e. the author John Cleveland). Dryden, in the Essay of Dramatic Poesy, uses the word Clevelandism for a PAGE 202. No. 617. No. 618. No. 619. wresting and torturing a word into another meaning'; and, later, he adds, “ to express a thing hard and unnaturally, is his new way of elocution. We cannot read a verse of Cleveland's without making a face at it, as if every word were a pill to swallow : he gives us many times a hard nut to break our teeth, without a kernel 'for our pains ” (ed. Scott and Saintsbury, xv. 287, 311). PAGE 205. The verses are a translation of a passage in Strada's Prolusiones Academicae. (Prolusio Sexta, Academia Secunda, p. 320, ed. Leyden, 1627.) See also note, vol. iii. p. 322. Motto. Horace, Sat. I. iv. 40-2.' Mr. Eusden. In A (No. 606) “This day is published a Letter to Mr. Addison, on the King's Accession to the Throne, by Mr Eusden. Printed for J. Tonson." Motto. Virgil, Georg. ii. 369-370. Two volumes were published in 1725 by Charles Lillie, the perfumer and news agent. See note, vol. i. p. 310. PAGE 210. An Alderman. "An allusion to John Barber, who had been a bookseller, was at this time an alderman, and afterwards DunaMan. Ante, p. 18, note. Nonumque, etc. Horace, Ars Poct. 388. Dapperwit. Ante, vol. vii. pp. 136, 210, 224. The Prospect of Peace (see vol. vii. pp. 317-319) and. The That fair Hill. A note is added in the duodecimo'edition Love-Casuist. See p. 270 (No. 605). An ancient Custom. See p. 198. IIth June (О. S.). It was also called Long Barnaby, and Barnaby-day. Acted, actuated. See note, vol. iii. p. 314. Motto. Horace, Odes, III. vi. 23-4. Love Casuist. Ante, p. 270 (No. 605). Child's. See note, vol. i. p. 310. A little work of a learned man. Mr. Morley finds an allusion No. 624. No. 625. No. 626. No. 627. PAGE 235. Motto. Horace, Epist. I. ii. 43. No. 628. Thosé upon Infinitude. See No. 590 and note. PAGE 236. The passage from Addison's Cato printed in the text is almost the entire first scene of the fifth Act, which is a soliloquy by Cato, described thus in the stage direction : "Cato solus, sitting in a thoughtful posture : in his hand Plato's Book on the Immortality of the Soul. A drawn sword on the table by him.” Regarding the Latin translation, Nichols supplies an interesting note. “This beautiful translation, which fame and Dr. Kippis have attributed to Bishop Atterbury (and which on that authority, and on oral tradition in the University of Oxford, I had printed as his in the Select Collection of Poems, vol. v..p. 6), I afterwards found reason (vol. viii. p. 302) to ascribe to Dr. Henry Bland, headmaster of Eton school, provost of the College there, and dean of Durham (to whom it is also without hesitation ascribed by the last and best biographer of Addison): and have since had the honour of being assured by Mr. Walpole that it was the work of Bland; and that he has more than once heard his father, Sir Robert Walpole, say, that it was he himself who gave that translation to Mr. Addison, who was extremely surprised at the fidelity and beauty of it." PAGE 238. Motto. Juvenal, Sat. i. 170-1. No. 629. PAGE 240. Brawn and Mince Pies. Boar's-head (or brawner's head), Christmas- or mince pies, and plum-porridge had come to be, “The high-shoe lords of Cromwell's making O that was flat idolatry." “Rather than fail, they will defy. That which they love most tenderly ; Their best and dearest friend, plumb-porridge.' Hall. See the article in Chambers's Book of Days, ii. p. 755. No. 630. PAGE 243. Thanksgiving. This may be, as Chalmers says, a reference to the Proclamation, issued the day before the publication of this Paradise Lost, iii. 365-371. No. 631 In a Stage-Coach. Cf. vol. ii. 181, 230, iii. 273, and vii. 221. His Periwig, which cost no small Sum. Cf. Tatler (No. 54) “He answer'd Phillis a little abruptly at Supper the same No. 631. No. 632. Evening ; upon which she threw his Periwig into the Fire. Well, said he, thou art a brave Termagant Jade; Do you know, Hussey, that fair Wig cost Forty Guineas ?" Cf. Pepys's reflections on the cost of periwigs, then coming into fashion. (Globe edition, by index.) PAGE 245. Plain Spanish. Advertisements of Plain Spanish Snuff' are frequent in A. See also the preliminary announcement of the Tatler. Gregorio Leti. 1630-1701. A full account is given in Bayle's May possibly ascribe. An intended parallel to the last paper Grotto at Twickenham (Elwin and Courthope, vi. 385), and his verses on the same (ib. iv. 494). See also Spectator, vol. i. p. 136. PAGE 251. Motto. Cicero, Orator, 34, 119. This paper has been ascribed to Zachary Pearce, the editor of Longinus. Internal evidence favours the view. See note to PAGE 254. A Fragment of Longinus. See the first Fragment in Pearce's Longinus (ed. 1762, p. 260). PAGE 256. Motto. Xenophon, ? also Diogenes Laertius, ii. 5; 11, 27 Longinus excuses Homer. § ix. (Pearce, ed. 1762, p. 48.) PAGE 258. Motto. Cicero, Somnium Scipionis, 6. A late Spectator. No. 626, ante, p. 229. These papers have been ascribed to Henry Grove (see B. 7.). No. 633. No. 572. No, 634. No. 635. |