CHAP. L] REVIEWING FOE ME. AND MES, GEIFFITHS, the same hand (wherein Ms quick suspicious glance detected 1757. no Lady Randolphs), would have nothing to do with the Jit. 29. character of Douglas. "What would come with danger from the full strength of Mrs. Gibber, he knew might be safely left to the enfeebled powers of Mrs. Woffington; whose Lady Randolph would leave him no one to fear but Barry at the rival house. But despairing also of Covent Garden when refused by Drury Lane, and crying plague on both their houses, to the north had good parson Home returned, and not till eight months were gone, sent back his play endorsed by the Scottish capital. There it had been acted; and from the beginning of the world, from the beginning of Edinburgh, the like of that play had not been known. The Poker Club* made their ecstacies felt from Hunter Square to Grub Street and St. James's, for no rise in the price of claret had yet imperilled the life of that excellent society. Without stint or measure to their warmth the cooling beverage flowed; and bottle after bottle (at eighteenpence a piece f) disappeared in honour of the Scottish Shakspeare, whom the most illustrious of the Pokers at once pronounced better than the English, because free from " unhappy barbarism;"—yes, because refined from the unhappy barbarism of our southern Shakspeare, and purged of the licentiousness of our poor London-starved Otway. It was veritably David Hume's opinion, and still * The Poker Chib was not so named till 1762, But the men spoken of in the text -were precisely that select section of Edinburgh society, already existing as a club, •which, on Scotland being refused a militia, called itself the Poker, " to " stir up the fire of the nation." See an account of it in Scott's notice of Home in his Prose Works (ed, 1835), six. 283, and in Burton's Life of Hume, ii. 456. •f Let me borrow here that exquisite burst of humour with which Johnson met Boswell's grave assurances that Scotch claret could really make a man drunk. " I assure you, sir, there was a great deal of drunkenness." "No, sir; there '' were people who died of dropsies, which they contracted in ti-ying to get " drunk." Life, iv. 273. diwtiiHiijting thw * itlsl