NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

NOTES TO THE INTRODUCTION

1A certain A. Buzaglo, who had a shop in the Strand, opposite Somerset House, frequently advertised in the newspapers in 1778. His warming-pans, for curing the gout, were highly recommended to the nobility.

2Letter to Mason, 18 April 1778 (The Letters of Horace Walpole, ed. Mrs. Paget Toynbee, Oxford, 1903-05, X, 222).

3Boswell’s Life of Johnson, ed. G. B. Hill and L. F. Powell, Oxford, 1934—, III, 318.

4XLV, 1778, 310.

5See Ruth A. Hesselgrave,Lady Miller and the Batheaston Literary Circle, New Haven, 1927.

6LIX, 1778, 145. Garrick acknowledged his authorship of this review in a letter to Hannah More, misdated 1777, in William Roberts,Memoirs of ... Mrs. Hannah More, 3rd ed., 1835, I, 116.

7The Farington Diary, ed. James Greig, New York, 1923-28, I, 186;Recollections of the Table-Talk of Samuel Rogers[ed. Alexander Dyce], New York, 1856, pp. 71-72.

8Miscellanea Genealogica et Heraldica, new ser., II, 1877, 473; Sir [John] Bernard Burke,Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Landed Gentry of Great Britain & Ireland, 9th ed., 1898, II, “Ireland,” p. 441; Richard Eustace Tickell,Thomas Tickell and the Eighteenth Century Poets, 1931, p. 173 and “Tickell Pedigree.”

9A long letter from John Tickell to the Duke of Newcastle, 26 August 1767, alludes to these circumstances and appeals to Newcastle’s generosity (Newcastle Papers, British Museum Add. MSS. 32,984, f. 350).

10G. F. R. Barker and A. H. Stenning (compilers),The Record of Old Westminsters, 1928, II, 919; R. A. Austen-Leigh (ed.),The Eton College Register, 1753-1790, Eton, 1921, p. 517; John Hutchinson,A Catalogue of Notable Middle Templars, 1902, p. 242.

11David Erskine Baker, Isaac Reed, and Stephen Jones (compilers),Biographia Dramatica, 1812, I, 713.

12Tickell to Garrick, 11 May 1778 (Private Correspondence of David Garrick[ed. James Boaden], 1831-32, II, 304).

13Unpublished letter in the Theatre Collection, Harvard College Library.

14I, 713-714.

15Garrick,Private Correspondence, II, 317.

16Private Letters of Edward Gibbon, ed. R. E. Prothero, 1896, I, 348.

17Last Journals during the Reign of George III, ed. A. Francis Steuart, 1910, II, 206n.

18The American Journal of Ambrose Serle ... 1776-1778, ed. Edward H. Tatum, Jr., San Marino, California, 1940, p. 296.

19Walpole,Last Journals, II, 117; Fox,Speeches, 1815, I, 116-118.

20Letters, ed. Toynbee, X, 195.

21Private Letters, I, 338.

22Last Journals, II, 115n. In a debate on the navy estimates, 2 December 1778, Temple Luttrell said of North:

Whenever the noble lord found himself closely pressed in argument, or fact, it was his known practice to get rid of the question by a joke. His manner was no less curious than his matter; when he was half asleep, or seemingly quite asleep, he collected a store of wit and humour, from Æsop, Phædrus, or Joe Miller, or some other book equally distinguished for such species of drollery; and, instead of reasoning, was sure to treat the House with a laugh (The Parliamentary History of England ... to the Year 1803[compiled by William Cobbett], 1806-20, XIX, 1388).

Whenever the noble lord found himself closely pressed in argument, or fact, it was his known practice to get rid of the question by a joke. His manner was no less curious than his matter; when he was half asleep, or seemingly quite asleep, he collected a store of wit and humour, from Æsop, Phædrus, or Joe Miller, or some other book equally distinguished for such species of drollery; and, instead of reasoning, was sure to treat the House with a laugh (The Parliamentary History of England ... to the Year 1803[compiled by William Cobbett], 1806-20, XIX, 1388).

23John Taylor,Records of My Life, 1832, I, 144.

24Last Journals, II, 206.

25Altercation; Being the Substance of a Debate ... on a Motion to Censure the Pamphlet of Anticipation[1778], p. 10;The Pamphleteer, XIX, 1822, 310.

26MS. note in Horace Walpole’s copy ofAnticipation.

27Thomas Moore,Memoirs, Journal, and Correspondence, ed. Lord John Russell, 1853-56, IV, 34.

28“Reminiscences.—No. IV. Richard Brinsley Sheridan, &c.,”Blackwood’s Magazine, XX, 209.

29The Royal Gazette, 17 March 1779.

30Though Johnson had disapproved ofThe Project, he thoughtAnticipation“a mighty fine thing.” So Boswell told Tickell at a dinner-party in April 1779 (Private Papers of James Boswell from Malahide Castle, ed. Geoffrey Scott and F. A. Pottle, Mount Vernon, N.Y., 1928-34, XIII, 232).

31XLVII, 1778, 566.

32Garrick,Private Correspondence, II, 322-323.

33Biographia Dramatica, I, 714.

34Hobby-Horses. Read at Batheaston, 1780, pp. 13-14.

35Ernest Law,The History of Hampton Court Palace, 1890-91, III, 318, 464.

36W. Fraser Rae,Sheridan, New York, 1896, I, 357.

37Walter Sichel,Sheridan, 1909, I, 442n.

38Clementina Black,The Linleys of Bath, 1911, p. 162.

39Thomas Moore,Memoirs of ... Sheridan, 2nd ed., 1825, II, 62.

40See Romney’s diary, as given in Humphry Ward and W. Roberts,Romney, 1904, II, 157-158. Romney painted three portraits of the second Mrs. Tickell, the best-known of which is reproduced in Sichel’sSheridan, II, facing p. 264.

41British Museum Add. MSS. 29,194, f. 152; 29,173, f. 44.

42I, 13. There is a circumstantial account of Tickell’s death and the conduct of his widow in [William Smyth]Memoir of Mr. Sheridan, Leeds, 1840, pp. 53-55.

43The London Magazine, XLVII, 1778, 566.

44The Croker Papers, ed. L. J. Jennings, 1884, I, 245-246.

Reduced from the original by one thirdANTICIPATION:Containing the Substance ofHIS M⸻Y’sMost Gracious SpeechTO BOTHH⸻S of P⸺L⸺T,ON THEOpening of the approachingSession,TOGETHERWith a full and authentic Account of theDebatewhichwilltake Place in theH⸺eofC⸻s,on the Motion for theAddress, and theAmendment.With NOTES.“So shall my AnticipationPrevent your Discovery.”Hamlet.LONDON:Printed forT. Becket, the Corner of the Adelphi,in the Strand. 1778.

Reduced from the original by one third

ANTICIPATION:Containing the Substance ofHIS M⸻Y’sMost Gracious SpeechTO BOTHH⸻S of P⸺L⸺T,ON THEOpening of the approachingSession,TOGETHERWith a full and authentic Account of theDebatewhichwilltake Place in theH⸺eofC⸻s,on the Motion for theAddress, and theAmendment.With NOTES.

“So shall my AnticipationPrevent your Discovery.”Hamlet.

“So shall my AnticipationPrevent your Discovery.”Hamlet.

“So shall my AnticipationPrevent your Discovery.”

“So shall my Anticipation

Prevent your Discovery.”

Hamlet.

Hamlet.

LONDON:Printed forT. Becket, the Corner of the Adelphi,in the Strand. 1778.


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