[{22b}] ‘Byron’s Miscellany,’ vol. ii. p.358. London, 1853.

[{23}] The italics are mine.

[{24}] Lord Byron says, in his observations on an article in ‘Blackwood:’ ‘I recollect being much hurt by Romilly’s conduct: he (having a general retainer for me) went over to the adversary, alleging, on being reminded of his retainer, that he had forgotten it, as his clerk had so many. I observed that some of those who were now so eagerly laying the axe to my roof-tree might see their own shaken. His fell and crushed him.’

In the first edition of Moore’s Life of Lord Byron there was printed a letter on Sir Samuel Romilly, so brutal that it was suppressed in the subsequent editions. (See Part III.)

[{28a}] Vol. iv. p.40

[{28b}] Ibid. p.46.

[{31}] The italics are mine.

[{41}] Vol. iv. p.143.

[{43}] Lord Byron took especial pains to point out to Murray the importance of these two letters. Vol. V. Letter 443, he says: ‘You must also have from Mr. Moore the correspondence between me and Lady B., to whom I offered a sight of all that concerns herself in these papers. This is important. He has her letter and my answer.’

[{44}] ‘And I, who with them on the cross am placed,
. . . . truly
My savage wife, more than aught else, doth harm me.’
Inferno, Canto, XVI., Longfellow’s translation.