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s probably correct, since "nine-tenths," are the precise proportion of the company gratified.--(_See the Gazette_.) Among the _elite_, or the company at the upper table, "Sir Peter Laurie was one, and Mr. Lockhart was not _one_: for he sat among the undistinguished at a side table." Our _Court_ guest also sat at a side table though he pleads guilty to "foul" means--"that of displacing an engine-turned and satine-ed card, which had been deposited therein, as the worthy _locum tenens_ and representative of its owner." But the contradictions circumstantial appear to (dis)advantage in the _Literary Gazette_, as will be seen among our quotations. The health of Burns being drunk "Both the sons of the poet standing up, the eldest expressed their gratitude for the tribute to their father's genius." The _Gazette_ states the Shepherd's health to have been prefaced by an "apt and interesting address," but the _Athenaeum_ represents the chairman to have "made sad work among the romances, &c." Upon the health of the poets of England being drunk, Lord Porchester is stated in the Gazette to have spoken "eloquently in reply, and pronounced a beautiful eulogium upon the ameliorating effects produced upon individuals and communities by the cultivation of the Muses:" a very pretty subject for a school theme, to be sure, but unfortunate in comparison with the "titter of a hundred tongues" by which Lord Porchester is elsewhere stated to have been silenced. "The toast of 'Sir George Murray, and the military heroes of Scotland,' called up that gallant officer, who addressed his applauding countrymen in a manner which seemed to be peculiarly grateful to their feelings. While he disclaimed it for his own humble services, he nobly awarded the laurel to his glorious companions in arms,--a Hopetoun, an Abercrombie, a Moore, and a Graham. He then mentioned his early recollection of Burns, whom he considered his father's house to have been honoured by receiving within its walls; and playfully alluded to what the chairman had stated of his sister being the 'Phemy' of the poet, "a bonnier lass Than braes of Yarrow ever saw;" and expressed his hope, as every bard was in duty bound to maintain the peerless beauty of the fair whom he selected for his theme, that the Ettrick Shepherd (whose acquaintance he this night rejoiced to have made), would not be provoked to jealousy in consequence of this comparison above the beauties of Yarrow.
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