i.'iui>.l.j ItHVIBWINO FOR ME. AND MRS. GEIPMTHR. " our circulating libraries,"* Nevertheless the Scottish 1767. clique made a stand for their rough Homeric doctor, Mi, 28, Smith, Robertson, and Homo were vehement in laudation ; Charles Townshend (" who," writes Hume to Adam Smith,1!" 14 passes for the cleverest fallow in England ") said ayo to all their praises ; and when, some months afterwards, llmno came tip to London to bring out the Tudor volumes of Ms H IB tori/) he published puffs of Wilkio under assumed signatures, both in the Critical Jiemew and in various magazines, and reported progress to the Edinburgh circle. It was somewhat " uphill work," ho told Adam Smith ; J and with much mortification hinted to Bobertson that the verdict of the Monthly Review (vulgarly interpolated, I should mention, by Griffiths himself §) would have upon tho whole to stand, " However," he adds, in his letter to Buljertson, " if you want a little flattery to the author " (which I own IB very refreshing to an author), you may tell 11 him that Lord Chesterfield said to me he was a great pout. " I imagine that Wilkie will be very much elevated by praise ** from an English earl, awl n knight of the garter, and an " ambassador, and u secretary of state, and a man of so 11 great reputation, For 1 observe that the greatest rustics " are commonly most affected with such circumstances." || It is to be hoped he was, and proportionately forgetful of low abuse from obscure hirelings in booksellers' garrets, ** An Irish gentleman," Humo in another letter told Adam Smith, " wrote lately a very pretty treatise on the 11 Bublime," 1f This Irish gentleman had indeed written so pretty a treatise on the Suhlimo, that the task-work of our critic became work of praise. " When 1 wan beginning the * Mmttlilii /(Vww, xvii. JiiJM, Bi'ulnntwr 1767, f Bwrtwj's ,/4/h H. J!H. t /Wrf, M, | to J»rior, i. 281, II Hurt«»"»< /«//r, ii, /if», f tbid, tiele, either of InuMtw «w«?i»»l««0 «r