any distinguished personages. By Lady Knighton.
Philadelphia, 1838.
Fourteen letters from Scott are given.
Letters between James Ellis, Esq., and Walter Scott, Esq.
Newcastle-upon-Tyne, 1850.
The letters from Scott are two in number.
Haydon's Correspondence and Table-talk, with a Memoir by his son,
Frederick Wordsworth Haydon.
2 vols., London, 1876.
The first volume contains a few letters by Scott.
The Life and Letters of Washington Irving, by his nephew, Pierre M.
Irving.
4 vols., New York, 1865.
Vol. I, p. 240, contains a letter to Brevoort; pp. 439-40, 442-4 and
450-1 contain three letters to Irving.
Memorials of James Hogg, by M.G. Garden.
London, 1903.
Four letters by Scott are included.
Memoirs of a Literary Veteran, including sketches and anecdotes of the
most distinguished literary characters from 1794 to 1849, by R.P.
Gillies.
3 vols. London, 1851.
Vol. II, pp. 77-83, contains three letters from Scott; Vol. III, pp.
143-4, contains one.
Sir Walter Scott. The story of his life, by R. Shelton Mackenzie.
Boston, 1871.
See p. 471 for a letter not published elsewhere.
Byron's Letters and Journals. Rowland E. Prothero, ed.
6 vols., London, 1898-1901.
See Vol. VI, p. 55 for a letter of Scott's not published elsewhere.
Catalogue of the Exhibition held at Edinburgh in July and August, 1871,
on occasion of the commemoration of the centenary of the birth of Sir
Walter Scott.
Edinburgh, 1872.
This catalogue contains notices of the autograph letters which were
exhibited, and prints a few of the letters.
A Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American
Authors.... By S. Austin Allibone.
3 vols. Philadelphia, 1870.
Two letters from Scott to Ticknor are given in the article on Scott.
Fragments of Voyages and Travel, by Basil Hall. Third series.
Chapter I. contains a letter written by Scott in the original
manuscript of _The Antiquary_, explaining why the author
particularly liked that novel.
Letters, hitherto unpublished, written by members of Sir Walter Scott's
family to their old governess. Edited, with an introduction and notes,
by the Warden of Wadham College, Oxford.
London, 1905.
See pp. 13-15 for a letter from Scott, and pp. 37-38 for a note of
instructions in regard to his daughter Sophia's history lessons.
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