J'BEFACK. that of all men on earth, Mr. Prior should ever venture on such a charge, or throw down such a challenge. At page 13 of Mr. Prior's first volume, in giving several details of the childhood of the poet, he expresses his thanks to " the Rev. Dr. Strean, of Athlone, to whom I feol obliged " for the inquiries he has made," So at pages 22, 28, 110, and in other places (in the Bocond volume, 255, &c). Yet the obligation was really incurred, not to Dr. Sfrcnn, but to an Sssay only once very slightly and cursorily alluded to (102), containing (LSD—149) the whole of Dr. Strean'a in- formation, and published in 1808 by Mr. Mangin, who not without reason complained, on the appearance of Mr. Prior's book, that, though Dr. Strean had placed it in Mr. Prior's hands telling him it contained all he had to any about Goldsmith, he had " employed much of what he found in " the JSfosay without having the, courtesy to use marks of (t quotation." (Parlour fffiitdoifl Book, 4-5.) , At pp. 28-20, 4547, 1.00, HH, JS>H, and in other parts of the description of Goldsmith's boyhood, nil the characteristic anecdotes are given generally ns on the authority of his sisters or friends; but any particular mention of the Percy Memoir, in which (5-0-7-1)-! 8-14) they were first published, is studiously avoided. In like manner the account of his first adventures in Edinburgh, told with an original air at p. 184-1,35, the notice of Mr. Contarino at p. 50-51, and of Mr, Lawder nt p, 130, are taken without acknowledgment from the same source (19-20, 17, and 18); and at p. 47 a little fact w imputation of borrowing