ns are fuller,
and they sound very much like Scott. (See above, p. 52, note.)
The Vision of Don Roderick.
Memoirs of the Court of Charles II, by Count Grammont. With numerous
additions and illustrations. London. [Edited by Scott.]
Reprinted in 1846, 1853, 1864. This last edition, in the Bohn
Library, has about 100 pp. of historical notes.
Secret History of the Court of James the First. With notes and
introductory remarks. 2 vols. Edinburgh. [Edited by Scott
anonymously.]
The book contains 1. Osborne's Traditional Memoirs; 2. Sir Anthony
Welldon's Court and Character of King James; 3. Aulicus
Coquinariae; 4. Sir Edward Peyton's Divine Catastrophe of the
House of Stuarts.
1813
Rokeby.
Memoirs of the Reign of King Charles I., by Sir Philip Warwick.
Edinburgh. [Edited by Scott anonymously.]
The Bridal of Triermain.
1814
Illustrations of Northern Antiquities from the earlier Teutonic and
Scandinavian romances, by Robert Jamieson ... with an abstract of the
Eyrbyggja-Saga; being the early annals of that district of Iceland
lying around the promontory called Sudefells, by Walter Scott.
Edinburgh.
See also Northern Antiquities by P.H. Mallet, London, 1847; and
the edition in Bohn's Library, 1890.
Lockhart says: "Any one who examines the share of the work which
goes under Weber's name will see that Scott had a considerable
hand in that also. The rhymed versions from the _Nibelungen Lied_
came, I can have no doubt, from his pen." (_Lockhart_, II, 320.)
The Works of Jonathan Swift, containing additional letters, tracts,
and poems, not hitherto published; with notes and a life of the
author, by Walter Scott. 19 vols. Edinburgh.
Second edition, revised, Edinburgh, 1824.
Memoirs of Jonathan Swift, Paris, 1826.
The Letting of Humour's Blood in the Head Vaine, etc. By Samuel
Rowlands. Edinburgh. [Edited by Scott. His name is not given, but the
Advertisement is dated at Abbotsford.]
This is an exact reproduction of the 1611 edition, except for the
addition of a few pages containing the Advertisement and the
notes. Another edition was printed in 1815.
Waverley.
1814-17
The Border Antiquities of England and Scotland; comprising specimens
of architecture and sculpture, and other vestiges of former ages,
accompanied by descriptions. Together
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