[130] Ibid., V, p. 198.
[131] Haydon attempted also to make trouble between Wordsworth and Hunt, by telling the former that Hunt’s admiration for him was only a “weather cock estimation” and by insinuations concerning his sincerity in friendships. (Haydon, Life, Letters and Table Talk, p. 197.)
[132] J. Ashcroft Noble, The Sonnet in England, and Other Essays, p. 108.
[133] Autobiography, II, p. 42.
[134] Autobiography, II, p. 44.
[135] Works, V, p. 203.
[136] Keats wrote Haydon, “There are three things to rejoice at in this age The Excursion, Your Pictures, and Hazlitt’s depth of taste.” (Works, IV, p. 56.)
[137] Works, II, p. 187.
[138] Ibid., V, p. 116.
[139] Ibid., V, p. 180.