[243] Evan Harrington, 137.
[244] Rhoda Fleming, 301. Later, however, an equivalent amount, placed in his hands in trust for another purpose, conveniently paid this debt. “It was enough to make one in love with civilization.” Ibid., 326.
[245] The Tragic Comedians, 195.
[246] Richard Feverel, 8.
[247] Ibid., 322.
[248] Van Laun: History of French Literature, II, 27.
[249] Cf. also the riot of personalities in Blackwood’s, Frazer’s, and other periodicals of their time.
[250] Butler’s etchings in The Way of All Flesh, are also from personal sources.
[251] Freeman observes, “Peacock abused contemporary poets generally, the Lake School particularly, and Southey in especial, for eighteen years.” Thomas Love Peacock, A Critical Study, 141.
[252] Melincourt, 106.