[81] Keats, Lamia, Bk. I, ll. 1-200. In the 708 lines of Lamia, there are 98 run-on couplets, 144 run-on lines, 39 Alexandrines and 11 triplets. The cæsura is handled with greater freedom than in the Story of Rimini.

[82] C. H. Herford, Age of Wordsworth, p. 83.

[83] R. B. Johnson, Leigh Hunt, p. 94.

[84] Leigh Hunt as a Poet, Fortnightly Review, XXXVI: 226.

[85] Sidney Colvin, Keats, p. 30.

[86] Garnett, Age of Dryden, p. 32.

[87] From Homer, Theocritus, Bion, Moschus, Anacreon, and Catullus.

[88] p. 13.

[89] Hunt, Correspondence, I, p. 115.

[90] Byron, Letters and Journals, IV, p. 238.