feudal system in Spain);--it is _not_ Spain. If he puts a few words
of prose any where, it will set all right.
"I have been ordered to town to vote. I shall disobey. There is no
good in so much prating, since 'certain issues strokes should
arbitrate.' If you have any thing to say, let me hear from you.
"Yours," &c.
[Footnote 43: Alluding to Lara.]
* * * * *
LETTER 191. TO MR. MURRAY.
"August 3. 1814.
"It is certainly a little extraordinary that you have not sent the
Edinburgh Review, as I requested, and hoped it would not require a
note a day to remind you. I see _advertisements_ of Lara and
Jacqueline; pray, _why?_ when I requested you to postpone
publication till my return to town.
"I have a most amusing epistle from the Ettrick bard--Hogg; in
which, speaking of his bookseller, whom he denominates the
'shabbiest' of the _trade_ for not 'lifting his bills,' he adds, in
so many words, 'G----d d----n him and them both.' This is a pretty
prelude to asking you to adopt him (the said Hogg); but this he
wishes; and if you please, you and I will talk it over. He has a
poem ready for the press (and your _bills_ too, if '_lift_able'),
and bestows some benedictions on Mr. Moore for his abduction of
Lara from the forthcoming Miscellany.[44]
"P.S. Sincerely, I think Mr. Hogg would suit you very well; and
surely he is a man of great powers, and deserving of encouragement.
I must knock out a Tale for him, and you should at all events
consider before you reject his suit. Scott is gone to the Orkneys
in a gale of wind; and Hogg says that, during the said gale, 'he
is sure that Scott is not quite at his ease, to say the best of
it.' Ah! I wish these home-keeping bards could taste a
Mediterranean white squall, or 'the Gut' in a gale of wind, or even
the 'Bay of Biscay' with no wind at all."
[Footnote 44: Mr. Hogg had been led to hope that he should be permitted
to insert this poem in a Miscellany which he had at this time some
thoughts of publishing; and whatever advice I may have given against
such a mode of disposing of the work arose certainly not from any ill
will to this ingenious and remarkable man, but from a consideration of
what I thought most advantageous to the fame of Lord Byron.]
* * * * *
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