prose and verse which form Vol. II. He is also credited with certain passages in Vol. I. In the Collected Works of Dante Gabriel Rossetti, Mr. W. M. Rossetti gives the remarks of his brother upon the poems; preceded by the supplementary chapter which he made to the Life, and followed by his comments upon the designs to the Book of Job, and upon certain points connected with the designs to the Jerusalem. The large majority of these observations appeared in the original edition; part of the Jerusalem section belongs only to that of 1880. A few of the opening phrases in the supplementary chapter must, Mr. W. M. Rossetti thinks, be Gilchrist's own, but he has not been at the pains of detaching them. Nothing else of any substantial bulk or importance was, he says, written by his brother for Gilchrist's book.
29. This statement goes too far. At a time when he knew nothing about the MS. book, nor yet about Rossetti, Gilchrist undertook to write the Life, and wrote a good deal of it. Afterwards, knowing Rossetti and the book, he fairly completed it, but not absolutely, as he died suddenly.
30. By Colonna, circa 1490.
31. Mr. W. M. Rossetti observes here, that the designs seem quite unlike Botticelli's, and that Giovanni Bellini has, with less obvious improbability, more generally been suggested. His own view, however, is that connoisseurs regard the authorship of the designs as extremely uncertain.
32. Poet and critic, author of Fine Art, &c., the third child and second son of Gabriele Rossetti, born in 1829. There were four children altogether, all honourably known in connection with Literature and Art, namely, Maria Francesca, author of A Shadow of Dante, Dante Gabriel, William Michael, and Christina, the