PKEFACE, Stockdale's Memoirs "furnishes scarcely an allusion to "Goldsmith. His papers, however, supply am anecdote " communicated by a lady eminent for hex* -writings in " fiction, his friend, and whom the writer has likewise tho "honour, &c. &c. &c." And then the anecdote, professing to be transcribed by Miss Jane Porter from the uaanuscripta of Mr. Stockdale, turns out to be a literal transcription from that very Memoirs of the worthy gentleman (ii. 13(5-137), which had been published nearly thirty years "before Mr. Prior's book, and in which Mr. Prior had been able to find "scarcely an allusion" to Goldsmith. At pp. 254-269 there is a long rigmarole about the identity of Lissoy and Auburn, and about the alehouse &c rebuilt by Mr. Hogan,—all professing to be tlae result of written communication or personal inquiry,—not a syllable of which may not be found in Mangin's Essay (MO-J 43) . in Mr. NewelTs elaborate and highly illustrated quarto edition of the Poetical Works (1811: " witb. remarks " attempting to ascertain chiefly from local observation the "actual scene of the Deserted Village " 61-SO), and in Mr. Hbgan's own account in the Gentleman*& MnffcGsiue (xc. 618-622),—not one of these authorities "being once named by Mr. Prior. At p. 288-289 we have a charming fragment of a letter to Reynolds transferred without acknowledgment from tho Percy Memoir (90-91); at p. 300, an agreement with Davies is silently taken from an earlier page (7 9) ; at p. 3 7 5, a curious letter of Tom Paine's to Goldsmith is so taken from a later page (96-98); and at pp. 328-33 O, a capital letter is in like manner copied, and not even correctly copied, from the same mal-treated book (92-94). ate Richard Sharpe tters is printed without the slightest hint that it had been. that I have corrected