Jerrold would perceive the germ of a retort before you had well begun to form your sentence, and would bring it forth in full blossom the instant you had done speaking . . . When the publisher of Bentley's Miscellany said to Jerrold,
'I had some doubts about the name I should give the magazine; I thought at one time of calling it "The Wits' Miscellany"' — 'Well,' was the rejoinder, 'but you needn't have gone to the other extremity.'
From Charles Cowden Clarke, Recollections of Writers (1878), p. 281.