Part 57 (2/2)
[Footnote 541: Among the English translations of Catullus may be mentioned those by the Hon. George Lamb, 1821, and Walter K. Kelly, 1854 (these are given in Bohn's edition), Sir Theodore Martin, 1861, James Cranstoun, 1867, Robinson Ellis, 1867 and 1871, Sir Richard Burton, 1894, Francis Warre Cornish, 1904. All are in verse except Kelly's and Cornish's. See also Chapter x.x.xv. of this work.]
[Footnote 542: Mr. Kirby was on the Continent.]
[Footnote 543: Presentation copy of the Nights.]
[Footnote 544: See Mr. Kirby's Notes in Burton's Arabian Nights.]
[Footnote 545: See Chapter xxix.]
[Footnote 546: Now Professor of Sanskrit at Cambridge.]
[Footnote 547: Chapter x.x.xi.]
[Footnote 548: Burton's book, Etruscan Bologna, has a chapter on the contadinesca favella Bolognese, pp. 242-262.]
[Footnote 549: 20th September 1887, from Adeslberg, Styria.]
[Footnote 550: Writer's cramp of the right hand, brought on by hard work.]
[Footnote 551: Of the Translation of The Novels of Matteo Bandello, 6 vols.
Published in 1890.]
[Footnote 552: Mr. Payne had not told Burton the name of the work, as he did not wish the news to get abroad prematurely.]
[Footnote 553: She very frequently committed indiscretions of this kind, all of them very creditable to her heart, but not to her head.]
[Footnote 554: Folkestone, where Lady Stisted was staying.]
[Footnote 555: Lady Stisted and her daughter Georgiana.]
[Footnote 556: Verses on the Death of Richard Burton.--New Review. Feb. 1891.]
[Footnote 557: With The Jew and El Islam.]
[Footnote 558: Mr. Watts-Dunton, need we say? is a great authority on the Gypsies. His novel Aylwin and his articles on Borrow will be called to mind.]
[Footnote 559:
My hair is straight as the falling rain And fine as the morning mist.
--Indian Love, Lawrence Hope.]
[Footnote 560: The Jew, The Gypsy, and El Islam, p. 275.]
[Footnote 561: It is dedicated to Burton.]
[Footnote 562: Burton's A. N., Suppl. i., 312; Lib. Ed., ix., 209. See also many other of Burton's Notes.]
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