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ave not been able to find it described. E.S.T. * * * * * QUERIES PROPOSED, NO. 2. When reflecting on my various pen-and-ink skirmishes, I have sometimes half-resolved to _avoid controversy_. The resolution would have been unwise; for silence, on many occasions, would be a dereliction of those duties which we owe to ourselves and the public. The halcyon days, so much desired, may be far distant! I have to comment, elsewhere, on certain parts of the _Report_ of the commissioners on the British Museum--which I hope to do firmly, yet respectfully; and on the evidence of Mr. Panizzi--in which task I must not disappoint his just expectations. I have also to propose a query on the _blunder of Malone_--to which I give precedence, as it relates to Shakspeare. The query is--have I "mistaken the whole affair"? A few short paragraphs may enable others to decide. 1. The question at issue arose, I presume to say, out of the _statement of Mr. Jebb_. I never quoted the Irish edition. If _C._ can prove that Malone superintended it, he may fairly tax me with a violation of my new canon of criticism--not otherwise. What says Mr. James Boswell on that point? I must borrow his precise words: "The only edition for which Mr. Malone can be considered as responsible [is] his own in 1790." [_Plays and poems of W.S._ 1821, i. xxxiii.] 2. I am said to have "repeated what _C._ had already stated."--I consulted the _Shakspere_ of Malone, and verified my recollections, when the query of "Mr. JEBB" appeared--but forbore to notice its misconceptions. Besides, one _C._, after an interval of two months, merely _asserted_ that it was not a blunder of Malone; the other _C._ furnished, off-hand, his proofs and references. 3. To argue fairly, we must use the same words in the same sense. Now _C._ (No. 24. p. 386.) asserts the _Malone had never seen_ the introductory fragment; and asks, who _forged_ it? He uses the word _fabrication_ in the sense of forgery.--The facts are produced (No. 25. p. 404.). He is informed that the _audacious fabrication_, which took place before 1770, was first published by Malone himself, in 1790--yet he expects me to apply the same terms to the blunder committed by another editor in 1794. 4. As an answer to my assertion that the Irish editor _attempted to unite_ the two fragments, _C._ proceeds to prove that he _did not unite them_. The procedure is rather defective in point of
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