Page 259, line 1. 'What hangs behind that curtain?' This story, if a story it may be called, is fictitious; and I have done little more than give it as I received it. Page 268, line 20. How oft, where now we rode Every reader of Spanish poetry is acquainted with that affecting romance of Gongora, "Amarrado al duro banco," &c. Lord Holland has translated it in his excellent Life of Lope de Vega. Page 272, line 1. This house was ANDREA DORIA'S. There is a custom on the Continent well worthy of notice. In Boulogne we read as we ramble through it, 'Ici est mort l'Auteur de Gil Blas ;' in Rouen, ‘Ici est né Pierre Corneille;' in Geneva, 'Ici est né JeanJacques Rousseau:' and in Dijon there is the Maison Bossuet; in Paris, the Quai Voltaire. Very rare are such memorials among us; and yet, wherever we met with them, in whatever country they were or of whatever age, we should surely say that they were evidences of refinement and sensibility in the people. The house of Pindar was spared when temple and tower Went to the ground; and its ruins were held sacred to the last. According to Pausanias, they were still to be seen in the second century. Page 284, line 18. And what transcends them all, a noble action. After line 18 in the MS. What though his ancestors, early or late, For wisdom, virtue-those who could renounce Bianca Capello, her story, Carmagnola, F. B. 71. 80, 81, 148. Boccaccio, his burial place, 135. Bologna, a night-scene in, 115; arrival of a traveller Bonatti, the astrologer, note, Boren, Christian, adventure of, note, 23. Bravo, description of, 146. Byron at Bologna, 116; his Caffaggiòlo, villa of Cosmo Carnival in St. Mark's Place, Carracci, Annibal, Cries of Catullus, his lake, 39. 44. Isabella de' Medici there Chatterton entering London, 2. Chillon, Chateau de, 7. Cicero assailed in the Via |