[140] Ibid., V, p. 175.

[141] Ibid., V, p. 174.

[142] That he needed better attention than he could receive in lodgings is seen from an account of Keats’s condition given in Maria Gisborne’s Journal (Ibid., V, p. 182), which says that when she drank tea there in July, Keats was under sentence of death from Dr. Lamb: “he never spoke and looks emaciated.”

[143] Works, V, p. 183-184. The quotation follows Keats’s punctuation.

[144] Ibid., V, p. 185.

[145] Cornhill Magazine, 1892.

[146] Works, V, p. 194.

[147] Ibid., V, p. 193.

[148] Correspondence, I, p. 107.

[149] P. 248.