[239] Hunt, Autobiography, II, p. 36; Correspondence, I, p. 126.

[240] Medwin, Life of Shelley, II, p. 137.

[241] Mitford, Life, I, p. 280. Jeaffreson, The Real Shelley, II, p. 357.

[242] Nicoll and Wise, Literary Anecdotes, p. 348; April 5, 1820. He assumed the debt for Hunt’s piano as naturally as he did for his own. Prof. Dowden says that John Hunt expected Shelley to become responsible for all of his brother’s debts. (Life of Shelley, II, p. 458.)

[243] Hunt, Correspondence, I, p. 158; November 11, 1820.

[244] Nicoll and Wise, Literary Anecdotes of the Nineteenth Century, p. 342.

[245] See Chapter IV, p. 89.

[246] Dowden, Life of Shelley, II, p. 456; also Works of Shelley, VIII, p. 252.

[247] (a) Nicoll and Wise, Literary Anecdotes, pp. 352, 356. (b) Byron, Letters and Journals, VI, p. 11.

[248] Dowden, Life of Shelley, II, p. 489.