FOOTNOTES:
[161] See the Introduction.
[162] See chapter on "Generosity."
[163] See chapter on "Friendships."
[164] Ibid.
[165] See chapter on "Love of Fame."
[166] Dallas, vol. ii.
[167] Moore, vol. i.
[168] See Moore, 35th and 36th letters.
[169] See "Childe Harold."
[170] See Introduction.
[171] "His lordship was in better spirits when I had met with some adventure, and he chuckled with an inward sense of enjoyment, not altogether without spleen, a kind of malicious satisfaction, as his companions recounted, with all becoming gravity, their woes and sufferings as an apology for begging a bed and a morsel for the night. God forgive! but I partook of Byron's levity at the idea of personages so consequential wandering destitute in the streets, seeking for lodgings from door to door, and rejected at all. Next day, however, they were accommodated by the governor with an agreeable house," etc.—Galt, p. 66.
[172] See chapter on "Courage, Coolness, and Self-control."
[173] Moore, vol. i.
[174] Galt says that what he relates of his visit to Ali Pasha has all the freshness and life of a scene going on under one's own eye.
[175] See Moore, Letters 52 and 54, to Mrs. Byron.
[176] Galt, p. 105.
[177] Moore, Letter 81.
[178] "Jacopo Ortis," Ugo Foscolo.
[179] Moore, Letter 166.
[180] Ibid.
[181] Moore, Letters 183 and 184.
[182] "Childe Harold," canto iv.
[183] Letter 312.
[184] See his "Life in Italy."
"Che giova a te, cor mio, l'esser amato?
Che giova a me l'aver si cara Amante?
Se tu, crudo Destine, ne dividi
Cio che amor ne stringe!"
[186] Letter 386.
[187] Letter 389.
[188] It was then that "Sardanapalus" came to light.
[189] See chapter on "Life in Ravenna."
"Many small articles make up a sum,
And hey ho for Caleb Quotem, oh!"
[191] See Letter 435.
[192] Moore, Letter 471.
[193] See his "Life at Genoa."
[194] See chapter on "Faults."