aot 
herself as a most abandoned prostitute and a swindler, all from 
her own letters, S too was expected to offer terms to prevent 
publication. These efforts succeeded and the matter dropped. 
The thing was actually advertised, however, as 
An authentic narrative of the conduct and behaviour of Mrs. 
M y now M——-y G——m during her residence at A——d 
house, B h ; containing a succinct and faithful history of the 
extraordinary means made use of by that lady to obtain such a 
profusion of expensive gifts from her benevolent patron the Rev. 
dr.’ W. n. Her acquaintance with Dr. James G——m the 
famous electrical empiric and her behaviour from the commence- 
ment of that connection, her intimacy and friendship for Mrs. A, 
sister to the empiric, her journey to Paris with occurrences there, 
her journey to Leicester and her marriage with Mr. G, brother to 
Dr. G and Mrs. A, with all the original letters, notes, and 
anecdotes. To which will be added a dissertation on swindling. 
By a friend of Dr. Wilson’s. In whose possession all the letters 
and papers now are.* 
2end. Dined alone in Galloway’s Buildings. 
23rd. Dined at Mr. Plunkett’s in the Circus with Messrs. 
Wiltshire, Blackwood, Brereton, Blake, &c. 
24th. Dined at rev Dr. Lewes’, No. 5 Galloway's 
Buildings, with the doctor, Mrs. Lewes, Miss and Mr. 
Brice. Dr. Lewes was put down as a sensible man with 
an affected wife. 
25th. Dined at the Three Tuns, Henry Phillips’s, with 
lord Kelly, colonel Whitmore, captain O’Byrne, &c. 
Reporting this meeting to his daughter the next day, he wrote— 
We dined at six and parted at ten, yet the tea flowed in copious 
streams to my thirsty lips this morning. 
26th. Dined at Alfred House with Dr. Wilson, who 
insisted on having him on his right hand, Messrs. 
*“ Bibliotheca Bathoniensis,” by E. Green. 
