[2] Letter to Mr. Gisborne, January 12, 1822. Professor Dowden’s ‘Life of Shelley,’ vol. ii., p. 447.
[3] ‘Lord Byron.’
[4] ‘Letters and Journals of Lord Byron,’ edited by Rowland Prothero, vol. vi., appendix iii.
[5] ‘Life of Shelley,’ vol. ii., p. 494.
[6] Henry Dunn kept a British shop at Leghorn.
[7] For Byron’s opinion of Shelley’s poetry, see appendix to ‘The Two Foscari’: ‘I highly admire the poetry of “Queen Mab” and Shelley’s other publications.’
[8] ‘The Angler in Wales,’ by Thomas Medwin, vol. ii., pp. 144-146.
[9] Lady Noel left by her will to the trustees a portrait of Byron, with directions that it was not to be shown to his daughter Ada till she attained the age of twenty-one; but that if her mother were still living, it was not to be so delivered without Lady Byron’s consent.
[10] It was at this time that Byron endeavoured to suppress the fact that he had written ‘The Age of Bronze.’
[11] Dr. Bruno.