218/377 13, and Mackenzie's _Life of Scott_, pp. 475-6.) The Boston Public Library contains three volumes which are thought to be a unique copy of so much of the Scott-Lockhart Shakspere as was printed. (See below, the Bibliography of books edited by Scott.) Scott's notes on Beaumont and Fletcher, which he had wished in 1804 to offer to Gifford, were actually used by Weber in his _Beaumont and Fletcher_, published about 1810, an edition which was characterized by Scott as "too carelessly done to be reputable." (_Lockhart_, Vol. 472.)] [Footnote 137: He seems to have connected heroic plays too closely with "the romances of Calprenede and Scuderi." See his introduction to _The Indian Emperor_, Dryden, Vol. |