[150] The Examiner, June 1st, July 6th, and 13th, 1817.

[151] Lines 181-206.

[152] Works, IV, p. 64.

[153] Lord Byron and Some of his Contemporaries, p. 257.

[154] May 10, 1820.

[155] Cf. with Poe’s sonnet, Science, true daughter of Old Time thou art.

[156] Haydon, Life, Letters and Table Talk, p. 201.

[157] In connection with Hyperion, it is interesting to note that the manuscript in Keats’s handwriting recently discovered, survived through the agency of Leigh Hunt. From him it passed into the ownership of his son Thornton, and later to the sister of Dr. George Bird. It has been purchased from her by the British Museum. (Athenæum, March 11, 1905.)

[158] This is, of course, a mistake.

[159] For other criticism of the 1820 poems by Hunt, see Lord Byron and Some of his Contemporaries, pp. 258-268.