[Footnote xlvii:
"Our Giant Capital where streets still spread Where once our simpler sins were bred."
["MS. L. (a)."]
"Our fields where once the rustic earned his bread."
["MS. L. (b)".]]
[Footnote xlviii:
"Aches with the Orchestra he pays to hear.
[MS. M."]]
[Footnote xlix:
"Scarce kept awake by roaring out encore."
["MS. L. (a)".]]
[Footnote l:
"Ere theatres were built and reverend clerks Wrote plays as some old book remarks."
[MS. L. (a)".]]
[Footnote li:
"Who did what Vestris--yet, at least,--cannot, And cut his kingly capers "Sans culotte.""
["MS. M."]]
[Footnote lii:
"Who yet squeaks on nor fears to be forgot If good Earl Grosvenor supersede them not".
["MS. L". ("a").]
"Who still frisk on with feats so vastly low "Tis strange Earl Grosvenor suffers such a show".
["MS. M".]]
[Footnote liii:
"Suppressing Peer! to whom all vice gives place, Save Gambling--for his Lordship loves a Race".
["MS. L". ("a").]]
[Footnote liv:
"Hobhouse, since we have roved through Eastern climes, While all the aegean echoed to our rhymes, And bound to Momus by some pagan spell Laughed, sang and quaffed to "Vive la Bagatelle!""--
["MS. L". ("a").]
"Hobhouse, with whom once more I hope to sit And smile at what our Stage retails for wit.
Since few, I know, enjoy a laugh so well Sardonic slave to "Vive la Bagatelle"
So that in your"s like Pagan Plato"s bed They"ll find some book of Epigrams when dead".
["MS. L". ("b").]]
[Footnote lv:
"My wayward Spirit weakly yields to gloom, But thine will waft thee lightly to the Tomb, So that in thine, like Pagan Plato"s, bed They"ll find some Ma.n.u.script of Mimes, when dead".
["MS. M".]]
[Footnote lvi:
"And spite of Methodism and Collier"s curse".
["MS. M".]
"He who"s seduced by plays must be a fool"
"If boys want teaching let them stay at school".
[MS. L. (a).]]
[Footnote lvii:
"Whom Nature guides so writes that he who sees Enraptured thinks to do the same with ease".
["MS. M".]]
[Footnote lviii: