OF PART THE SECOND. xxiii 
M.A. of Trinity College, Cambridge', has libe- 
rally permitted the use of his written observa- 
tions in Greece throughout tlie whole, not only 
of the present, but also of the subsequent volumes. 
Wherever reference has been made to those 
observations, the author, consistently with his 
former plan, has been careful to give Mr. 
Walpole's intelligence in his own words, exactly 
as they have been transcribed from his original 
manuscript. 
A similar obligation has been conferred by 
J. B. S. MoRRiTT, Esq.** in the interesting 
account taken from his Journal of the present 
state of Halicarnassus and of Cnidus, and published 
in the Notes to the Seventh Chapter ; also by 
the plan which accompanies his description of 
the Rui7is of Cnidus. This last communication 
will peculiarly claim regard, in being the first 
(3) Tlie learned author of Essays bearing his name in the Herculanensia. 
4to. Land. 1810. See his former communications to this Yv'ork, Part 
the First, vol. II. p. 354. Note (4.) Octavo Edition. IMr. Walpole is also 
known as the editor of Comicorum Greecorum Fragmenta, and of other 
dissertations equally remarkable for their taste and classical erudition. 
(4) Celebrated for his controversy with the late Jacob Bryant, on the 
subject of Homer's Poems and the War of Troy. It is to be regretted, 
that so much of Mr. MorritCs Journals still remains unpublished ; parti- 
cularly as they contain observations respecting a very considerable part of 
Asia Minor, of which our information is remarkably deficient. 
