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Notes
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Notes

 
[1]

The one notable exception is D.S.M. Imrie's "The story of 'The Scots Magazine,'" in Scots Magazine, 30 (1939), 269-274, 341-354, 445-452 and 31 (1939), 51-58, 141-150, 218-226, largely emphasizing the role of Scottish writers therein.

[2]

"The Contemporary Distribution of Johnson's Rambler," ECS, 2 (1968), 157.

[3]

Numbers 51, 57, 127, 133, 139 are Warton's; Numbers 1, 7, 8, 12-14, 16, 18, 30, 36, 37, 47, 52, 57, 61, 64-66, 88, 100, 117, 118, and 140, Hawkesworth's; Number 23, by the fourth man.

[4]

Charlottesville, Va., 1955; The Library, 4th ser., 21 (1941), 320-336; Oxford Bibliographical Society Publications, N.S., 12 (1963), respectively.

[5]

Respectively, 12 (1750), 365; 16 (1754), 53, 190, 276, 372, 425, 486, 584; 17 (1755), 84; 18 (1756), 18 and 180.

[6]

It may be worth noting that SM has "a view" (l. 59); Oxford, "her view." And SM has italics in l. 27 ("her") and l. 37 ("night" and "noon"). (The line numbers are from SM, which omits the fifth stanza.)

[7]

See my "William Cowper and the European Magazine," Studies in Bibliography, 34 (1981), 238-241. The epigraph is the first line of Catullus's poem on Lesbia's dead sparrow.

[8]

None of these periodicals is in Alexander Chalmer's edition of the British Essayists.

[9]

See Luella F. Norwood, "The Authenticity of Smollett's Ode to Independence," R.E.S., 17 (1941), 55, n.1.

[10]

See Minor Poems, vol. 6 in the Twickenham Pope, p. 461.

[11]

David Garrick, A Critical Biography, by G. W. Stone, Jr. and G. M. Kahrl (1979). No mention of either in G. M. Berkowitz, David Garrick, a Reference Guide (1980).

[12]

I came upon these two poems and a prose piece (see below) too late for Professor John Abbott's very recent biography of Hawkesworth, although I have sent him the references.

[13]

The Letters of Junius, ed. John Cannon (1978), p. 320.

[14]

It is not listed in the index to Florence Hilbish's Charlotte Smith, Poet and Novelist (1749-1806) (1941).

[15]

See Simon Trefman, Sam. Foote, Comedian, 1720-1777 (1971), p. 175.

[16]

See the GM, 1765, p. 442 under date Sept. 20.

[17]

Donald Greene, ed. Samuel Johnson Political Writings (1977). These two pieces and the next are not included in the Clifford-Greene bibliography of Johnson.