Henry Esmond; The English Humourists; The Four Georges
Appendix
Book I, chap, viii, p. 80, line 9: "mist" was wrongly altered in revisededition to "midst".
Book I, chap, xii, p. 130, line 2 from foot: "through" was wrongly alteredin revised edition to "to".
Book II, chap, ii, p. 179, line 7 from foot: "guests," though neveraltered, should clearly be "hosts".
Book II, chap, xv, p. 307, line 8: the following passage was omitted inthe edition of 1858:--
"I always thought that paper was Mr. Congreve's," cries Mr. St. John, showing that he knew more about the subject than he pretended to Mr. Steele, and who was the original Mr. Bickerstaffe drew.
"Tom Boxer said so in his _Observator_. But Tom's oracle is often making blunders," cries Steele.
"Mr. Boxer and my husband were friends once, and when the captain was ill with the fever, no man could be kinder than Mr. Boxer, who used to come to his bedside every day, and actually brought Dr. Arbuthnot who cured him," whispered Mrs. Steele.
"Indeed, madam! How very interesting," says Mr. St. John.
"But when the captain's last comedy came out, Mr. Boxer took no notice of it--you know he is Mr. Congreve's man, and won't ever give a word to the other house--and this made my husband angry."
"Oh! Mr. Boxer is Mr. Congreve's man!" says Mr. St. John.
"Mr. Congreve has wit enough of his own," cries out Mr. Steele. "No one ever heard me grudge him or any other man his share."
Book III, chap, i, p. 326, line 19: for "Frank", Thackeray by aninteresting reminiscence of _Pendennis_ wrote "Arthur".
THE ENGLISH HUMOURISTS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
THE ENGLISH HUMOURISTS
OF THE
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY
A Series of Lectures
DELIVERED IN ENGLAND, SCOTLAND, AND THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
[First edition, 1853; second edition, revised, 1853]